run around here and there
Running east and West, a Chinese idiom, pronounced D ōē NGB ē nx ī P ǎ o, mostly refers to activities forced by life or for a certain purpose. It comes from Qinyuanchun, farewell to Zhang zhouqing.
Analysis of Idioms
Running east and West, running east and running west
Idiom usage
It's the first goods returned, so it's running around in Shandong and Henan. The 79th chapter of the light on the wrong road by Li Lvyuan in Qing Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
In the early Yuan and Wei dynasties, the rhyme of leaving Zhang zhouqing in the spring of Qinyuan said: "even in the past few years, we have had a good friendship, and we have been running east and West, and water has been sent to meet the mountain."
run around here and there
trample people like mud and ashes - shā rén rú cǎo
modify the heaven and change the sun - yí tiān huàn rì
wife who has shared her husband 's hard lot - zāo kāng zhī qī