in every matter
Chinese idiom, Pinyin Qi ā NY ī B ǎ ISH ù n, means very obedient. It's from the first time.
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 27 of his book "the surprise of making a case at the first moment": "whatever the boatman teaches him to do, he is obedient."
Analysis of Idioms
Usage: used as predicate, attribute, adverbial and object; used in life. At this time, Mrs. Gou invited her aunt to come and quietly told her that she had no reason to disobey. The eighty ninth chapter of Wu Yanren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in Qing Dynasty.
in every matter
be endowed with extraordinary talents - rú chuán dà bǐ
travel after telling the destiny - yōu bì yǒu fāng
express the emotion of missing to remote relatives - yì lù méi huā