It's all over the place
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh í Zhu ǎ NJI ǔ K ō ng, which means gambling often loses money. It comes from Ling Mengchu's the first book of the Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 13 of the book "the first time to make a surprise on a case" said: "I don't know that I have a lot of family belongings, but I can't get rid of them. It seems that in the past three years, they gradually withered away."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in spoken English
It's all over the place
Read a hundred times, you can see the meaning - dú shū bǎi biàn,qí yì zì xiàn
reach the same goal by different means - shū lù tóng guī
be in a leisurely and carefree mood - xián qíng bié zhì
associate oneself with undesirable elements - tóng chén hé wū