A hundred goods and a thousand articles
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǎ IP ǐ nqi ā NTI á o, which means many names. It comes from the southern history, Qi Ji Xia, abolishing emperor Dong hunhou.
The origin of Idioms
In the southern history of the Qi Dynasty, the emperor was abolished and the Marquis of the East fainted, "the head of the male pheasant, the cloak of the crane, and the egret were ordered. There were thousands of pieces of them, and they were no longer poor."
Idiom usage
It refers to many kinds.
A hundred goods and a thousand articles
a braggadocio , miscalculating his strength , conceived the vain ambition of overtaking the fleeting rays of the sun - kuā fù zhú rì
do not hurt the important essentials - wú shāng dà tǐ
with one 's countenance turning now blue , now pale - wǔ sè wú zhǔ