all quiet
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is w à NL à IW ú sh à ng, which means that the surrounding environment is very quiet and there is no sound at all. Music: Ancient Xiao. A general term for sound. Generally refers to the natural environment. It comes from the Tang Dynasty's Chang Jian's the temple of Chan after the temple of breaking mountains.
The origin of Idioms
In Tang Dynasty, Chang Jian wrote a poem entitled "the temple after breaking the mountain", which said: "all sounds are silent, but the chimes of the remaining bells are ringing."
Idiom usage
Chapter 25 of Wu Chengen's journey to the West in Ming Dynasty: "the traveler said:" at this time, everything is silent, the ice ship is obvious, just go. " “
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: silence and silence; antonym: People's voices are boiling
all quiet
shamelessly seek personal gain - yíng yíng gǒu gǒu