hills upon hills
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is qi'nf'ngw'nh è, meaning thousands of hills and valleys, describes the continuous mountains, high and low overlap. From the miscellany of Wanshu mountains and rivers.
The origin of Idioms
Shen Bang's miscellaneous notes of Wanshu mountains and rivers in the Ming Dynasty: "every heavy snow comes at the beginning, with thousands of peaks and valleys, and the accumulation of elements is beautiful. It is one of the eight sceneries in the capital."
Idiom usage
The terrain is steep.
hills upon hills
in one 's humble position , one 's word does not carry much weight - rén wēi yán qīng
a person who looks down upon everyone and fancies that nobody dare do anything to him - mò yú dú yě
There is something to be said later - tuì yǒu hòu yán
Heavy mountains and heavy waters - chóng shān fù shuǐ
die to preserve one's virtue intact - qǔ yì chéng rén