be suitable everywhere
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú sh ī B ù K ě, which means that it can be used everywhere. It also means that there is nothing that can't be done well. It comes from the book of songs on June 1.
Idiom explanation
1. It can be used anywhere. 2. Nothing can't be done well, nothing can't be done. Shi: implement, implement.
The origin of Idioms
Ouyang Xiu, Song Dynasty, wrote in his "notes on poetry on June 1" that "you can't do anything to withdraw your writing power, but you should take poetry as the end of the article."
Biography of Zhang Wenyu in the book of the new Tang Dynasty: "if you are talented, you can't do anything, how can you use it as a gift?" (like your talent, there is nothing you can't do. Where can you give something as a warning?)
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
be suitable everywhere
Come in the soup, go in the water - tāng lǐ lái,shuǐ lǐ qù
messengers of the gods and spirits - shén chà guǐ qiǎn
prolonged illness makes the patient be a doctor - jiǔ bìng chéng yī
help one another in defense work - shǒu wàng xiāng zhù
utterly unscrupulous in its zeal to please its master - zhí quán fèi yáo