all the limbs and bones
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ì t ǐ B ǎ IH á I, which means all parts of the human body, generally refers to the whole body, with "four limbs and a hundred bones". From the wizard of oz.
Idiom explanation
Explanation: all parts of the human body. It refers to the whole body. The same as "four limbs and one hundred bones".
Idioms and allusions
Source: Chapter 73 of the wizard of Oz by Li Baichuan of the Qing Dynasty: "when the fetus becomes mature, the four bodies and all kinds of body Qi will come to you as you wish, like beads rolling on a lotus plate, like smoke containing willows, everywhere you can go."
Discrimination of words
Usage: as subject and object; used in written language
all the limbs and bones
You can't see it, you can't hear it - shì zhī bù jiàn,tīng zhī bù wén
not occur even in a hundred years - bǎi nián nán yù
comment on various things without restraint - shuō bái dào lǜ
mountain food and wild vegetables - shān yáo yě sù