be made one
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h é RW é iy ī, which means to put the scattered things together. It comes from the biography of Chunshenjun in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Chunshenjun in historical records, it is said that "when a minister is king, he should not be good at Chu.". Qin and Chu are united to face Korea, and Han will hold back his hand. "
Idiom usage
Contractive type; used as a predicate; refers to the combination of two or more things into one. Examples scholars can combine all the advantages into one. If Yiya is blended with five flavors, it is the whole flavor. (the third volume of Siming Shihua by Xie Zhen of Ming Dynasty)
be made one
a good essay which has solid substance and beautiful sentences - xián huá pèi shí
so poor as to have no room to stick an awl on - pín wú zhì zhuī
a man should get married on coming of age - nán dà dāng qǔ
crow like a cock and snatch like a dog - jī míng gǒu dào
persuade sb . to do good and dissuade him from doing evil - jìn kě tì fǒu