search for the origin and the outcome of the development of things
From the beginning to the end, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Yu á NSH à Ji à nzh à ng, which means to examine the beginning of things and foresee its results. From Lun Heng Shi Zhi.
The origin of Idioms
In Wang Chong's Lun Heng Shi Zhi of the Han Dynasty, it is said that "when a saint sees misfortune and fortune, he is also a prime minister who pushes things from the beginning to the end." "Three Kingdoms · Wei Shu · Zang Hongzhuan" says: "although the servant is not sensitive, he can't see the beginning and end."
Idiom usage
In the book baopuzi Zhengguo written by Ge Hong of Jin Dynasty, it is said that "the husband combines the sun with the moon, and he still has some mistakes, so he can't always be in the middle."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: from the beginning to the end, from the beginning to the end
search for the origin and the outcome of the development of things
Half a hundred miles is ninety - xíng bǎi lǐ zhě bàn yú jiǔ shí
to entertain imaginary or groundless fears - qǐ guó yōu tiān
squat on the grass and chat of old times - bān jīng dào gù