go on a journey of thousands of miles
Long March, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w à NL à ch á ngzhi à ng, which means a long journey of thousands of miles, and describes a very long journey. It's out of the frontier.
Idiom explanation
Expedition: a long journey.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Changling's poem "leaving the fortress" in the Tang Dynasty: "the moon was bright in the Qin Dynasty, the pass was in the Han Dynasty, and the long march was not yet returned."
Idiom usage
To be formal; to be predicate or object. To win the national victory is only the first step. Mao Zedong's "report at the second plenary session of the Seventh Central Committee of the Communist Party of China" and Chen Yi's "sending Shen and Zhang Zhujun to Yan'an" poem: "the long march does not count, and there is a North Star in Tianjin."
Idiom story
During the Tang Dynasty, Wang Changling, a poet, wandered around Hexi and witnessed the northern Khitans harassing the border areas southward, which made the people destitute. He wrote "leaving the fortress" to express his dissatisfaction: "in the Qin Dynasty, the moon was bright, in the Han Dynasty, the pass was closed, and the long march was not returned. But if you make the Dragon City fly, you don't teach Hu Ma to go to Yinshan. " It is hoped that the imperial court will send capable officers to guard the border.
go on a journey of thousands of miles
If one does not press the crowd, one hundred will not follow one - yī bù yā zhòng,bǎi bù suí yī