melt like ice and break like tiles
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ī ngs à NW ǎ Ji ě, which means the metaphor completely disappeared or completely collapsed. It comes from the biography of Fu Peng in Wei Zhi of the Three Kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
Pei Songzhi's annotation in the biography of Fu Fu in the history of the Three Kingdoms quoted Sima Biao's strategy in the Jin Dynasty: "compared with the past three years, if you take the lead from the left and the right, the enemy will be disintegrated. If you accept the disadvantages, you can get it by calculation."
Discrimination of words
Synonym: the ice melts
Idiom explanation
The metaphor of complete disappearance or complete collapse.
Idiom usage
It means to disappear
Chinese PinYin : bīng sàn wǎ jiě
melt like ice and break like tiles
begin to display one 's talent. chū lù fēng máng
Drinking water to know the source. yǐn shuǐ zhī yuán