crisscross footpaths between fields
Tian Lian Qian Mo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ti á NLI á nqi ā nmॸ, which means to describe the vast and continuous fields. It comes from the fourth chapter of Emperor Wudi in the Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
The path in the field.
The origin of Idioms
In the fourth chapter of Emperor Wu in the Han Dynasty written by Xun Yue of Han Dynasty, "the rich have fields and fields, while the poor have no place to live."
Idiom usage
Example: Feng Menglong's Yu Shi Ming Yan (Ming Dynasty) Vol. 22: "today, large families have no place for small people, those who have land do not plough, and those who want to plough have no land."
Chinese PinYin : tián lián qiān mò
crisscross footpaths between fields
where the wind passes , the grass bends -- influence of gentlemen. fēng xíng cǎo cóng
defeat one 's opponent by a surprise move. chū qí zhì shèng
with both a benevolent mind and heart. rén xīn rén shù
There is no beginning, but there is an end. mǐ bù yǒu chū,xiǎn kè yǒu zhōng
try to shorten the neck of a crane and lengthen that of an owl -- to go against nature. jié hè xù fú