set out on the long trek to a far distance
A Chinese idiom, the pronunciation of which is Qi ā NL ǐ Ti á OTI á o, remote: remote. It means a long way. It comes from the ancient and modern novels by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the ancient and modern novels: fan juqing's life and death, saying: "I bid farewell to my younger brother and go to Shanyang for a long time. Is it not for friends to despise flesh and blood, but for faithfulness to persecute the midgut
Idiom usage
Li Shaoquan wanted to make peace, but Zeng Guoquan was only in charge of the war, and sent Tang Jingsong to see the general. The sixth chapter of Zeng Pu's Nie Hai Hua in Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
It is said that during the period of Emperor Han and Ming, Zhang Shao, a scholar in Nancheng of Ruzhou, and Shanyang, a scholar in Chuzhou, went to Luoyang to take the exam together. They made an appointment to meet at Zhang Shao's home in Chongyang next year. He missed his appointment in business and died of suicide. His soul went all the way to meet Zhang Shao. Zhang Shao also went all the way to pay homage to his dead body, and then he committed suicide
Chinese PinYin : qiān lǐ tiáo tiáo
set out on the long trek to a far distance
fragmentary hearsay knowledge. kǒu ěr zhī xué
try to stop the passage of time. cháng shéng jì rì
so far behind that one can only see the dust of the rider ahead. wàng chén mò jí
fly one 's falcons and course one 's hounds. fēi yīng zǒu quǎn
the very fowls and dogs have no peace. jī quǎn bù níng