The door to the door
Speaking from door to door, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m é nd à oh à Shu à, which means to publicize and explain in every family. From the book of filial piety, guangzhide.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of filial piety, guangzhide: "a gentleman's education is based on filial piety. It's not a family's education, but a language's education."
Idiom usage
It refers to the propaganda and explanation from door to door.
Examples
Yu Liang of Jin Dynasty wrote in the book of rang Zhong Shu: "how can people in the world say that they are all calm and evil."
In the Southern Dynasty, Liang renfang's "Qi jingling Wenxuan Wang Xingzheng" said, "if you don't speak, you can say it at home."
In the biography of Xiao Chen in the book of Zhou, it is said that "a person who has a long history should not be told from door to door."
Chinese PinYin : mén dào hù shuō
The door to the door
have edges and corners -- aggressive and sharp-minded. yǒu léng yǒu jiǎo
The branch is bigger than the root. zhī dà yù běn
be rich and varied as rosy clouds are rising slowly. yún xīng xiá wèi
try every trick to mislead the public. zhāo yáo zhuàng piàn
regulate the appetite according to the dishes. kàn cài chī fàn