It's all over the place
Zhu jicunji, a Chinese idiom, is a Chinese phonetic alphabet, which means accumulating bit by bit. It often describes that things are not easy to complete. It comes from Zhu Xi's Zhu Zi Yu Lei Zhu Zi Yi of Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Goods and wealth have not come from heaven, but have been accumulated by ancestors.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: Zhu Ji Gu Ji, Zhu Ji Cun Ji, Zhu Cun Ji
The origin of Idioms
Zhu Xi of Song Dynasty wrote in Zhu Zi Yu Lei Zhu Zi Yi: "since Yang was 14 or 15 years old, he felt that this thing was a good thing, and his heart was in love. Some people do not dare to be ignorant of themselves, but actually get it by accumulating money. "
Idiom explanation
Little by little, little by little. It's often used to describe things that are not easy to accomplish.
It's all over the place
the rider falls as the horse rears in fright - mǎ yǎng rén fān
a scene of desolation after a plague when the population is decimated - shí shì jiǔ kuì
hate someone to the core hatred marrow - hèn zhī rù gǔ