All in one
Ronghuitongjia is a Chinese idiom, pronounced R ó nghu ì t ō ngji ā. It describes the fusion of all aspects of knowledge and truth to get a comprehensive and thorough understanding. It comes from the epitaph of the cemetery of Zhan, commander in chief of sinangqing Huguang, written by Ye Shi of Song Dynasty.
Meaning: to melt all aspects of knowledge and truth, get a comprehensive and thorough understanding.
Source: Song Ye Shi's "chronicle of the cemetery of Zhan, commander in chief of sinangqing Huguang": "I've read all kinds of books, learned all kinds of books, and learned all kinds of books, including astronomy, geography, image number and other books."
Chinese PinYin : róng huì tōng jiā
All in one
live in straitened circumstances. pá shū yǐn shuǐ
have no alternative against one's will. pò bù dé yǐ
Have eyes but not know Mount Tai. yǒu yǎn bù shí tài shān