The wind never blows
The wind does not sing, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē NGB ù m í ngTi á o, which means gentle wind, branches do not make a sound, a metaphor for social stability. It comes from Han huankuan's on salt and iron, floods and droughts.
Idiom usage
For decades, however, it is true that there is a wind on five days and a rain on ten days, the wind does not blow, the rain does not break, the night is wet, the day is clear, and the faith is peaceful.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: chaos in the world
The origin of Idioms
Han huankuan's "on salt and iron · flood and drought" said: "Zhou Gongzai's discipline and the world is peaceful, the country has no premature injury, and there is no famine years. When this happens, the rain doesn't break and the wind doesn't blow. " In Wang Chong's Lun Heng Shi Ying of the Han Dynasty, "the wind does not sing, the rain does not break, there is a wind in five days, and there is a rain in ten days."
Idiom explanation
With the gentle wind, the branches make no sound. It refers to social stability.
Chinese PinYin : fēng bù míng tiáo
The wind never blows
vulgar ideas reappear in one 's mind. bǐ lìn fù méng
High aptitude and profound knowledge. cái gāo zhì shēn