the beam breaking and the rafter falling -- the country being in a stage of ruin
Dongbeng, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ò ngxi ǔ Cu ī B ē ng, which means dongbeng, a metaphor for overturning. It's from the Song Dynasty Chen Yu's Hua Yu.
Idiom usage
The temple of Xuansheng is a temple of Xuansheng, a temple of Xuansheng, a temple of Xuansheng, a temple of Xuansheng, a temple of Xuansheng, a temple of Xuansheng, a temple of Xuansheng, a temple of Xuansheng, a temple of Xuansheng, a temple of Xuansheng, a temple of Xuansheng Through the ages, the pillars die.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: Dongkui, Dongkui
The origin of Idioms
In the Song Dynasty, Chen Yu's Hua Yu: "a poem in Shi Shunyuan's AI Wang Dan says In the past, I heard about the martyrs in the right section of Shaanxi Province. Now I see Yan Gaoqing in Changshan. He is a pillar of the country and short-lived
Idiom explanation
The pillars of the earth collapsed. The metaphor is overturning.
Chinese PinYin : dòng xiǔ cuī bēng
the beam breaking and the rafter falling -- the country being in a stage of ruin
A little bit of gold is useless. diǎn jīn fá shù
Beat the hub and rub the shoulder. jī gǔ mó jiān