Go to the East and go to the West
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ō ngzh ē NGX ī t ǎ o, which means to send troops on all sides. From "zuowuwei general Cheng Anzi Cui Xian Xingju.".
The origin of Idioms
Yang Jiong of the Tang Dynasty wrote in the statement of Cui Xian, the son of Cheng'an, a general of zuowuwei: "if you send out a chariot to give you a Yue, go to the East and the west, and go to the back alone, you can be your husband, even though you are a group of women."
Idiom usage
It refers to war. I've helped our country to achieve great success. I've been working hard for 40 years. I've no longer hated Bianjing! We should encourage it. The biography of Muhua Li in the history of Yuan Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: fight in the South and move to the north and the South [antonym]: settle down, settle down and build a camp
Go to the East and go to the West
an author 's works destined for posterity - míng shān shì yè
a shortsighted and good-for-nothing person - ròu yǎn fán tāi
The net of heaven is large and wide, but it lets nothing through - tiān wǎng huī huī,shū ér bù lòu