not leave a bit
He Gan Hai Gan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h é h é h ǎ IQI á n, which means the river is dry and the sea is dry. The metaphor is exhaustive and thorough. From the fifth chapter of three heroes and five righteousness.
The origin of Idioms
The fifth chapter of three heroes and five righteousness: "who knows, the man surnamed Zhan didn't know what to do. He said that the food was leftover, the wine was muddy, the jar fell, the dishes and bowls were smashed, and he scolded the river dried up."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Analysis of Idioms
River and sea
not leave a bit
fearful with a guilty conscience - huái zhe guǐ tāi
It will be too late to deal with an enemy if he is allowed to grow in strength. - zī màn nán tú
every order is executed without fail - lìng xíng jìn zhǐ
not a single tile remains -- to berazed to the ground - piàn wǎ wú cún