far-flung network
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is d ì w ǎ ngTi ā NLU ó, which means the sky and the ground are covered with nets. It refers to the encirclement set up in all directions, and refers to the tight encirclement of the enemy and fugitives. From Xuanhe dispatch of Song Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Tianluo: a net that catches birds in the air.
The origin of Idioms
"Xuanhe dispatches affairs of the great Song Dynasty" Hengji: "it's hard to leave Yinfu, and it's worth the disaster of heaven and earth." yuan · anonymous's "lock the mirror" the third fold: "Heaven's soldiers under the net, don't go two holes demon."
Idiom usage
It is the subject and object of the law. Example: Song Gong was so surprised that he was stunned that he didn't know what to do, so you had a good strategy. How could you escape. In Ming Dynasty, Shi Naian's forty seventh chapter of the complete story of the water margin and ninety eighth chapter of the chronicles of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, he said, "we should arrange for the land and the sky to be covered, and we should catch the dragon and fight for the tiger."
far-flung network
Catch the chicken and scold the dog - zhuō jī mà gǒu
strengthen the defences and clear the fields - gù bì qīng yě
kind heart and soft countenance - xīn cí miàn ruǎn