climb up high mountains and cross vast seas
The Chinese idiom "trestle mountain sailing" is "zh à NSH à NH á NGH à I" in pinyin, which means crossing mountains and rivers and crossing dangerous obstacles. It comes from the preface to Qushui poetry on March 3 by Yan Yanzhi of the Southern Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the preface to Qushui poems on March 3, written by Yanyan of Song Dynasty in the Southern Dynasty, it is said that "navigation on the trestle mountain, contribution beyond the desert, no empty moon in the palace."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: navigation on terraced hills
Idiom usage
It's time for us to set foot on the mountain and sail, to sing the wind and admire the righteousness, and to transform the people into the common customs. "Song Shu · emperor Xiaowu Ji"
Chinese PinYin : zhàn shān háng hǎi
climb up high mountains and cross vast seas
God knows it, but man. shén ér míng zhī,cún hū qí rén
dissipated young sets who take a fancy to lewdness. yóu fēng xì dié