all-embracing
All embracing, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is w ú Su ǒ B ù R ó ng, nothing can not accommodate. It is very broad. From the annals of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The 15th chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty written by Feng Menglong in the Ming Dynasty and Cai Yuanfang in the Qing Dynasty: "Wang Ao said:" the Qin Dynasty has the tendency of annexing the whole world. For the sake of the king, it is better to entrust yourself to the Qin Dynasty. The king of Qin was magnanimous and generous. He gave himself up to the virtuous and was tolerant of others. " Gong Zizhen in the Qing Dynasty wrote in the memorial book of Taicang wuzhongtang: "he was the son of the king's father. He was tolerant of all kinds of things. He was extremely weak in teaching."
Idiom story
During the Three Kingdoms period, Cao Pi, Emperor Wen of Wei Dynasty, was very envious of his younger brother Cao Zhi's talent and worried that he would rebel. So he asked him to go out of Beijing to his fiefdom, and at the same time, he sent the eunuchs to watch his every move. Once, Cao Zhi was framed by a eunuch. Under the pressure of the empress dowager, Cao Pi had to demote him as Marquis of Anxiang, boasting that he was tolerant of the world, let alone brothers?
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: all embracing and magnanimous antonym: small bellied Chicken Intestines
Idiom usage
He has a great capacity for everything.
Chinese PinYin : wú suǒ bù róng
all-embracing
An egg strikes against a stone. —overestimate one's strength. luǎn yǔ shí dòu
one 's eyes grow round with delight at the sight of money. jiàn qián yǎn hóng