various grades and ranks
Sanliujiudeng, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā NLI ù Ji ǔ D ě ng, which means that there are many levels and categories with various differences. From a dream of Red Mansions.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 75 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: "you rabbits are heartless and forgetful! Every day in a place, whose grace you don't touch? It's just that the club lost a few taels of silver, and you're just waiting for it. "
Idiom usage
This man is a snob. He divides people into three, six, nine grades. Those who are needed are ahead and those who are not.
various grades and ranks
have everything that one expects to find - yīng yǒu jìn yǒu
It's easier to hide a clear gun than a hidden arrow - míng qiāng róng yì duǒ,àn jiàn zuì nán fáng
this election campaign has seen all the usual mud-slinging we have come to expect . / there has been a lot of political mudslinging in the battle for votes - è yì zhòng shāng