Scattered in the East and West
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is d ō NGL í NGX ī Lu ò, which means one here and one there. It describes scattered stars. It comes from qunyin Lei Xuan · Taoyuan Ji · ancient city gathering by Hu Wenhuan of Ming Dynasty.
Idioms and allusions
Source: Ming Dynasty Hu Wenhuan's Anthology of Qun Yin Lei · Taoyuan Ji · ancient city gathering: "he also said that he would not surrender Cao, but now he is more and more annoyed. He is happy with his daughter najinduo, and he suddenly casts the tone of kindness and righteousness, leaving my brothers everywhere." Example: when you get out of the station, you can see from a distance the houses of, the buildings burned down during the war, the remains of stones and foundations, and plaintively complain about the bankruptcy of capitalism. Qu Qiubai's "the history of Russia"
Discrimination of words
[pinyin code]: dlxl [usage]: used as attribute and adverbial; used for state
Scattered in the East and West
a scholar in reduced circumstances - qín jiàn piāo líng
search for seclusion and beautiful scenery - xún yōu tàn shèng
Respect the time and love the day - jìng shí ài rì
The same book, the same car - shū tóng wén,chē tóng guǐ
To fix one's position on another - jiāng qǔ gū yǔ