ride the roads Thành ngữ, tục ngữ
All roads lead to Rome
This means that there can be many different ways of doing something.
All roads lead to Rome.
People can arrive at the same conclusion by different means.
all roads lead to Rome|all|lead|road|roads|rome
literary The same end or goal may be reached by many different ways.

A proverb.
"I don't care how you get the answer," said the teacher, "All roads lead to Rome."
at the crossroads
at the crossroads Also,
at a crossroads. At a point of decision or a critical juncture, as in
Because of the proposed merger, the company is standing at the crossroads. This phrase, based on the importance accorded to the intersection of two roads since ancient times, has also been used figuratively just about as long. In the 1500s Erasmus quoted from the Greek Theognis's
Elegies (c. 600 B.C.): “I stand at the crossroads.”
inroads
inroads see
make inroads into.
make inroads into
make inroads into Encroach on, advance at another's expense, as in
The Japanese rapidly made inroads into the computer-chip market. The noun
inroad originally meant “an invasion.” [Late 1600s]
ride the roads
To biking on the anchorage of a accurate abode or area, as in a car or on a bike. I love demography my bike out on a Sunday morning and benumbed the anchorage that discount the ocean.Learn more: ride, road
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