gunfire licks the heavens
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p à Ohu à Li á NTI à n, which means that the fire is very fierce. From journey to the West.
The origin of Idioms
The 89th chapter of Wu Chengen's journey to the West in Ming Dynasty: "his father and son, together with Tang monk, wrote on the city tower, with banners and banners blocking out the sun, and there was a lot of fire."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; used as predicate and attributive; refers to the heavy artillery attack. The 16th chapter of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in the Qing Dynasty: "it's only two or three times. It's already like this, not to mention the artillery fire. If you come to the enemy in person, you will naturally escape." Kun Peng spread his wings and turned his horn. Looking down with the blue sky on your back, you can see that they are all human cities. There was a lot of gunfire and bullet marks everywhere. Frighten the sparrow. Mao Zedong's "niannujiao bird question and answer"
Chinese PinYin : pào huǒ lián tiān
gunfire licks the heavens
speak one way and think another. xīn kǒu bù yī
with aching head and knitted brows. jí shǒu cù é
One will get nowhere if he lacks single-mindedness and perseverance.. duō qí wáng yáng
a learning both sound in theory and practice. nèi shèng wài zhǔ
cannot help feeling rather embarrassed. nán yǐ wéi qíng
unable to distinguish one kind of grain from another. wǔ gǔ bù fēn
one 's favour as high as the sky and thick as the earth. dài tiān jí dì