in every matter
Qianyiwanshun is a Chinese vocabulary, Pinyin Qi āī NY ī w à NSH ù n, which comes from xiyoubu.
Idiom entry: obedient pronunciation: Qi ā NY ī w à NSH ù n explanation: very obedient. It is the same as "obedience". Source: in the sixth chapter of the supplement to the journey to the West in Ming Dynasty, Dong said: "suddenly a pair of servants knelt down in front of us and invited the queen to the banquet. The traveler thought to himself," I don't want to be obedient. " example: Third, but when Marquis pan comes, no matter what guests are in the room, let him. How can Shen Er Bao refuse? Yes, I promise. Chapter 167 of Zhang Chunfan's Nine Tailed turtle in Qing Dynasty
in every matter
Only clothes, not people - zhǐ zhòng yī shān bù zhòng rén
Don't cover up great virtue with one brush - bù yǐ yī shěng yǎn dà dé
as if nobody on earth could beat him - bù kě yī shì
able only to see the little patch of sky above - jǐng dǐ zhī wā
the court above and the masses below -- government officials and the people - cháo yě shàng xià