the wilds were full of dead bodies of the starved
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is è PI à Obi à NY à, which describes the tragic scene of a large number of people dying of hunger. It comes from Mencius Liang Hui Wang Shang written by Mencius Ke in the pre Qin period.
Idiom usage
It's the year-old famine. People all eat jujube vegetables. Romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: corpses everywhere, ten rooms nine empty, starving, sorrow everywhere; Antonyms: longevity, people's well-being, plenty of food and clothing, family to people
The origin of Idioms
Mencius · Liang Hui Wang Shang written by Mencius · Mencius · in the pre Qin period: "Pao has fat meat, stables have fat horses, people have hunger, and wild people have hunger. This kind of animal leads to cannibalism."
Chinese PinYin : è piǎo biàn yě
the wilds were full of dead bodies of the starved
a runaway horse gallops so fast that it leaves no trace. bēn yì jué chén
Change the soup but not the dressing. huàn tāng bù huàn yào
the true mingled with the false. xū xū shí shí
be kind and have not enough courage to. xīn cí shǒu ruǎn