all rivers flow to the sea
A hundred rivers facing the sea, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǎ ichu ā NCH á oh ǎ I, which means that the water flows towards the sea. Many metaphors mean that countless scattered things come together. It comes from Jiao Gan's Yilin Qianzhi Wuwang of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Jiao Gan's Yi Lin Qian Zhi Wu Wang of Han Dynasty said, "a hundred rivers and seas are popular, but the road is far away, and there are no less than one."
Idiom usage
As object and attribute
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: falling apart
all rivers flow to the sea
consider everyone beneath one 's notice - mù kōng yú zǐ
look for a needle in a bottle of hay - dà hǎi lāo zhēn
play the flageolet , begging for food -- ask alms by playing an instrument - chuī xiāo qǐ shí
stately manner of the han official - hàn guān wēi yí