from door to door
Door to door, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ā im é n ā IH ù, which means that according to the order of households, no one is missing. It comes from the second chapter of Chapter 6 of Li Yingru's wild fire and spring breeze fighting ancient city.
Idiom usage
She went to several villages along the river to beg for bits and pieces of cloth and sewed a colorful hundred family clothes for he Manzi. Liu Shaotang's PU Liu Jia Ren
The origin of Idioms
Li Yingru's "wild fire and spring breeze fighting the ancient city" Chapter 6 2: "she has a plan in mind. She goes door to door and asks people if they want water."
Analysis of Idioms
Door to door, door to door
from door to door
not ashamed to admit being the last - bù chǐ zuì hòu
There is no sneer at the end of the story - kuài xià wú jī