innumerable twists and turns
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā nhu í B ǎ izhu ǎ n, which means to describe repeated twists and turns or tortuous process. From autumn thoughts.
The origin of Idioms
Fan Zhongzhong, Yuan Dynasty, wrote in his Autumn Thoughts: "I've been wandering here for thousands of times, and I can't leave a few sentimental piles behind."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. Chapter 67 of the popular romance of the Republic of China written by Cai Dongfan and Xu Kuai: "only by sacrificing a few lives and spending a few money, can we achieve the goal of monarchy." Chapter 31 of Jin Yong's biography of arched Heroes: "I know that the road on Taohua island is full of twists and turns. Let alone save people, I was trapped for three days and three nights and nearly starved to death." Yu Yafei's Ode to the Yellow River: "the Yellow River flows through the rainbow, the waves flow down and the waves rush, the momentum is strong; the stone barriers and mountains are hard to stop, and the river flows eastward."
innumerable twists and turns
those who are above and those who are below are all on good terms - shàng hé xià mù
utterly unscrupulous in its zeal to please its master - zhí quán fèi yáo
prize one copper as highly as one 's life - yī wén rú mìng
the wheel of transmigration turns unceasingly -- a buddist doctrine - fǎ lún cháng zhuàn
intensive and meticulous farming - jīng gēng xì zuò