bits and pieces
It's a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Q ī L í NGB ā Su ì, which means to describe dilapidated; fragmentary; refers to fragmentary objects. From Huansha Ji.
The origin of Idioms
Liang Chenyu's Huansha Ji of Ming Dynasty: "you have made my country fragmented and sent me up and down. How can I do now?"
Idiom usage
As predicate, attributive, adverbial; refers to fragmentary. When it came to the East, it broke the feudal society which had been fixed in the East for thousands of years. Guo Moruo's "before and after anyway" and Feng Menglong's "chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty" Chapter 54: "at one time, the fish ran away and the birds scattered, and the Chu soldiers chopped melons and cut vegetables, and killed them indiscriminately. It's all broken up. "
bits and pieces
see evidence of people's distress everywhere - mǎn mù chuāng yí