every tree and bush
Every plant is a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is y ī C ǎ oy ī m ù, which means a metaphor for a tiny thing. It comes from the biography of Ying Shao in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"The withered grass in spring is a disaster, and the blooming wood in autumn is also a difference," said Fan Ye of the Southern Song Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
One needle and one thread
Idiom usage
It's a little common thing. Do not disturb. If you commit a crime, behead! The thirty ninth chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong in Ming Dynasty
every tree and bush
Man proposes, god disposes. - móu shì zài rén,chéng shì zài tiān
when the prince is put to shame , the minister dies - jūn rǔ chén sǐ
The river does not make the well - hé shuǐ bù fàn jǐng shuǐ