all over the world
All over the world, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is p à Ti à nzh à Xi à, which refers to the whole world. From the book of songs Xiaoya Beishan.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs · Xiaoya · Beishan": "under the heaven of PU, is it not the land of the king; on the shore of the land, is it not the Minister of the king."
Idiom usage
Pei Songzhi's annotation of "Quan Dayue, Jia Yuan's title" in the annals of the Three Kingdoms · Wu Zhi · biography of Wu Zhu quoted Jin Yu Pu's biography of Jiang Biao as follows: "under the heaven, is it not the king's land; the king takes the world as his home." (2) in the old book of Tang Dynasty, biography of Li Mi: "under the whole heaven, the land is straight, the flat wood is far away from the quicksand, and the vast sea is poor in Danxue. All of them are digging wells and plowing fields, so as to make the land level and drive the people's life away." (3) the 29th chapter of Water Margin written by Shi Naian in Ming Dynasty: Wu Song's drunken attack on Jiang Menshen, Shi en's heavy hegemony over Mengzhou Road: in the past three years, there has been no fight in Taiyue; in the whole world, there is no one like me! 4. Chapter 78 of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: I have traveled all my life in the whole world for more than 40 years, from the emperor to the common people, and I am afraid of loneliness. What demon God dare to disobey loneliness Chapter 50 of Jinyong's Tianlong Babu: in the whole world, there are not many things I really can't find out, even though the lion opens his mouth.
all over the world
a fish escaped through the seine - lòu wǎng zhī yú
join closely together like the teeth of a comb or the scales of a fish - zhì bǐ lín zhēn
insatiably covetous and gluttonous - tān lán wú yàn