homeless and wandering from place to place
Li ú L í di ā nzh ì, a Chinese idiom, means that life is hard, wandering around, with "wandering". It comes from "four dynasties record of hearing and seeing · praise to Yichuan".
The origin of Idioms
Ye Shaoweng of the Song Dynasty wrote in the four dynasties' records of hearing and seeing, praising and presenting Yichuan: "it was then eliminated, and the soldiers and envoys were exiled and died of nothing."
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: to live and work in peace and contentment
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; used in life. Example: in the book of songs, Daya Dang: "people also have their own words, but they are full of them."
homeless and wandering from place to place
To strike a duck and startle a mandarin duck - dǎ yā jīng yuān
Evil will be recompensed with evil - è yǒu è bào
an important statement need not be prolix - yào yán bù fán