There is no end to Luoyi
Luo Yi is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Lu ò y ì B ù Ju é, which means coming and going one after another. It is used to describe the front and back of a car or horse. It comes from the biography of Guo Chen in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Guo Chen in the book of the later Han Dynasty, "the prestige of Hou Hong, Wu and Wen Chen came from the south of the Yangtze River, or from you and Ji, and they all came down, and Luoyi never stopped."
Analysis of Idioms
There is an endless stream of synonyms and a lot of antonyms
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, attributive and adverbial to describe the luggage cars and people on the road. Lu Xun's preface to Xiao Hong's life and death field
Chinese PinYin : luò yì bù jué
There is no end to Luoyi
well established and irrefutable. què qiè bù yí
East, West, North and South. dōng xi nán běi rén
a swallow nesting on a canopy. yàn cháo mù shàng
nourish one 's parent in his old age and bury his dead body. yǎng lǎo sòng zhōng