exchange visits
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B á L á if ù w ǎ ng, which originally means to run around quickly, and then refers to frequent contacts. It is also called "Ba Lai Bao Qu". From the book of rites Shaoyi
Interpretation of Idioms
Pull: quick. newspaper: through "go", quickly.
The origin of Idioms
Shaoyi in the book of Rites: "don't pull it out, don't report it."
Idiom usage
It is used to describe frequent communication. When you are young, you come to the bed with your feet on the ground to encourage the guests to sit down. When you come in again, you bring your feet for a few days to report back and forth, and you walk very hard. (Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio, a Xian, in the Qing Dynasty). (Wang Tao's yingyu magazine in Qing Dynasty)
exchange visits
Callose shoulder and callous foot - zhī jiān jiǎn zú
Come in the soup, go in the water - tāng lǐ lái,shuǐ lǐ qù
the son of a rich and important family - gāo liáng zǐ dì
search into an abstruse subject and indicate the importance - gōu xuán tí yào