Mountain and sea
Shanzou Haishu, pronounced sh ā NZ ō uh ǎ sh ì, is a Chinese idiom, which refers to the corner of the mountain and the seaside, and generally refers to the remote place.
usage
It is used as an object or attribute to describe a remote place.
source
Wang Shu of Qing Dynasty wrote in his book "today's world, virtue and conduct": "when officials come to their places, there are many mountains and seas. Those who can write by reading will ride by in vain." According to the Ming Dynasty's "bingxu in April of the 27th year of the Wanli era, an imperial edict was issued to the whole world in the form of pingwo": "the imperial edict says: I will inherit Hongxu, manage Zhaoren, Haishu and shanzou, all my children,..."
Examples
The mountains and the seas are full of people with lofty ideals. Who was born in them? Wang Xianqian, Qing Dynasty
Mountain and sea
a person who returns to a place he once abandoned - qián dù liú láng
feel like old friends at the first meeting - yī miàn rú jiù
Turn the tables on the right and stir up chaos - fǎn zhèng bō luàn