whenever and wherever possible
Whenever and wherever, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su í sh í Su í D ì, which means according to the local situation at that time; at different times and places; at any time and place; all the time and everywhere. From notes of Zheng Tang.
The origin of Idioms
The first volume of notes of Zheng Tang written by Zhou Zhongfu in the Qing Dynasty: "poems about mountains are different sometimes and everywhere. They can be colored and set at any time and anywhere. Otherwise, they can be expressed."
Analysis of Idioms
Anywhere, anytime
Idiom usage
It refers to time and moment.
Examples
Some people suggested to him: recruit more folk villagers and scatter them around Ningbo, Zhenhai and Dinghai, and divide them into small groups by land and water. Guo Moruo's Chinese history manuscript, part five, chapter one, section one
whenever and wherever possible
enjoy both felicity and longevity - fú shòu shuāng quán
Fish letters and wild geese letters - yú shū yàn xìn
flunk the civil service examination - pù sāi lóng mén