One after another
The Chinese idiom, Li á ns ā NJI ē è r in pinyin, means continuous words. From a dream of Red Mansions.
The origin of Idioms
The 96th chapter of a dream of Red Mansions written by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty: "Mrs. Wang can't help crying in secret. She is sad for her younger brother and worried about Baoyu. So many things are not random. Where can we stand?"
Idiom usage
It can be used as an attributive or adverbial.
Examples
At first, I was addicted to the tenderness of men. A year later, the children came one after another and fell into the so-called sacred maternal love. Old house by Wang Xiyan
One after another
cause destruction to both sides - liǎng bài jù shāng
precipitous rock faces and sheer cliffs - xuán yá qiào bì
sell plums without kernel -- a mean trick - mài lǐ zuān hé