everywhere
One day, one place, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī Ti ā NY ī D ì, meaning all over the sky and all over the ground, describing everywhere. It comes from the marriage story of awakening the world.
The origin of Idioms
The 34th chapter of "marriage to awaken the world" written by Xi Zhou Sheng in the Qing Dynasty: "he is also a partner of the di family who has never shared money. He is angry that he can't do it. He goes everywhere to publicize it. Not only in his village, but also in neighboring villages and counties, he has become a legend."
Idiom usage
Used as an attributive or adverbial; used in writing.
everywhere
be lucky enough to be there at the time - shì féng qí huì
keep modest so as to cultivate one 's moral character - bēi yǐ zì mù
reconcile oneself to one 's situation - suí yù ér ān