stop at nothing
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú Su ǒ B ù zh ì, which means that there is nothing to do, there is nowhere to go, and there is nothing to do. From the Analects of Confucius, Yanghuo
Entry
stop at nothing
Pinyin
wúsuǒbùzhì
Basic explanation
It refers to nothing not to do, also refers to everywhere, also refers to nothing not to do. Shen JiJi of the Tang Dynasty wrote in Ren's biography: "every intimate relationship is omnipresent, but it is not as good as chaos." Feng Menglong's ancient and modern novels in Ming Dynasty Volume 1: talking at night, you ask me to answer, all the dirty talk in the neighborhood, everywhere.
Citation explanation
1. There's no place you can't get to. Shi Ji. Vol. 129. Biography of goods: Zhou people are both fine, but they are especially good at learning from Shi. There are hundreds of Zhuan Hu, and Jia Jun kingdom is everywhere. Chen Zi'ang's "the form for Chen Lingying, the general of Jinwu", tells us that in the west, it is more than quicksand; in the East, it is more than sea; in the south, it is more than north. 2. Describe carefully. Lin Mengchu of Ming Dynasty: he was expected to be smart, to pay attention all the time, and to touch Ju Yu everywhere. 3. Describe a person who is proficient in talent. The second and third chapter of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty. It means that you can do anything bad. the Analects of Confucius. Yang goods: if it has not been obtained, it must be obtained; if it has been obtained, it must be lost. There is no limit to what is wrong. Chapter 4 of a dream of Red Mansions: drinking today, watching flowers tomorrow, and even gambling and whoring are gradually everywhere. No, it won't happen. "New Five Dynasties History. Volume 54. Miscellaneous biography. Biography of Feng daozhuan. Preface": if people are like this, they will suffer from disaster and chaos.
Idiom usage
As a predicate, adverbial, attributive; refers to nowhere
Chinese PinYin : wú suǒ bù zhì
stop at nothing
dash about in a battlefield. chí chěng jiāng chǎng
A good teacher makes a good student. míng shī chū gāo tú
a hungry person is not picky and choosy. jī bù zé shí
not resigned to playing second fiddle. bù gān shì ruò