continuously
One after another, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Ji ē Li á Nb ù Du à n, meaning one after another without interruption. From the annals of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The 73rd chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty written by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty: "from the royal palace to the gate of Guangjia, the streets and thoroughfares are full one after another."
Idiom usage
It refers to the continuous and continuous example of only seeing people, buying and selling. The 11th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms are continuous and come in succession; antonyms are intermittent and sometimes appear
continuously
the drunken singing and the usual dancing - hān gē héng wǔ
Soldiers come to meet generals, water comes to earth weirs - bīng lái jiàng yíng,shuǐ lái tǔ yàn
resign from office and return to one 's native town - gào lǎo huán jiā
swallow anything and everything - jiān shōu bìng lù