countless ties
Wanzhu Qiansi, Pinyin w à NL à Qi à ns à, Chinese idioms, all kinds of close and complex relations between each other. It's from Song Dai Shiping's pity for life.
explain
A thousand threads, ten thousand threads. The original description one after another, countless. Now it describes many kinds of close and complicated relations between each other.
allusion
[source]: Dai Shiping, Song Dynasty, wrote the poem "pitying for a poor life:" the willows beside the road are numerous and inextricably linked, and they can't hold a bit of melancholy. " [example]: when you are young, you will see your temples more, not to mention the new illness. Song · Xin Qiji's poem "butterfly loves flower · send you brother"
usage
As predicate, attributive, adverbial; used between people or things. Describe one after another, the number is countless. (2) it is often used to describe the complicated relationship between the two or the complicated feelings and thoughts. It means that the relationship between the two is complicated or complicated.
Chinese PinYin : wàn lǚ qiān sī
countless ties
do things before one is told. xiān yì chéng zhǐ
turn all the previous labour to nothing. qián gōng jìn fèi
two tigers cannot live on the same mountain. guó wú èr jūn