universal nature
Senluowanxiang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s à NLU ó w à nxi à ng, which means all kinds of scenes in heaven and earth. The description is rich in content. From the monument of Changsha Museum in Maoshan.
Idiom explanation
Sen: numerous; Luo: list; Vientiane: all kinds of things and phenomena in the universe. It refers to all kinds of scenes that are listed one after another between heaven and earth. The description is rich in content.
The origin of Idioms
The stele of Changsha Museum in Maoshan, written by Tao Hongjing of Liang Dynasty in the Southern Dynasty, states that "a man with a myriad of things is closely related to the cultivation of Liangyi; a hundred methods are mixed together, and there is no realm of three religions."
Idiom usage
The subject predicate type refers to all kinds of weather in the universe. (Volume 19 of Wu Deng Hui Yuan by Song Shi Puji)
Chinese PinYin : sēn luó wàn xiàng
universal nature
It's easy to change, but hard to change. jiāng shān hǎo gǎi,běn xìng nán yí
mountains and seas are whistling. shān hū hǎi xiào
Hate each other and know each other well. hèn xiāng zhī wǎn