far-reaching ambition
Ambition of a thousand miles, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā NL ǐ zh ī, which means great ambition. It comes from the spring and Autumn Annals of the Lu family Changli written by Wei LV Buwei of the Warring States period.
Idiom usage
As subject or object; used of ambition
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: ambition of a swan
The origin of Idioms
In the Warring States period, Wei LV Buwei's "Lu's spring and Autumn Annals, Changli" said, "if you want to fight with him at one stroke, you will have a thousand li ambition. If you are not virtuous, you will not go to the suburbs if you are not righteous."
Idiom explanation
Of great ambition.
far-reaching ambition
preserve one 's own life at all costs - gǒu quán xìng mìng
Fear of death and greed for life - pà sǐ tān shēng
Abandon one's armor and lose one's Crossbow - qì jiǎ fù nǔ