till the seas dry up and the rocks decay
Haikuishilan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ǎ IH é sh í L à n, which means haikuishilan. It is used to describe a long time and means a firm will never change. It comes from Jing Wei Shi by Qiu Jin of Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Thousands of people hate each other, but the sea is dry and the rocks are rotten.
Analysis of Idioms
The sea is dry and the stone is rotten
The origin of Idioms
The second chapter of Jing Wei Shi written by Qiu Jin of Qing Dynasty: "the sea is dry, the stone is rotten, the feeling has not changed, just want to sit and continue to speak."
Idiom explanation
The sea is withered and the stone is rotten. It has a long history. A firm will never change.
Chinese PinYin : hǎi hé shí làn
till the seas dry up and the rocks decay
A wide range of talents is harmful to one's health. cái guǎng fáng shēn
the broken stem of a floating duckweed -- wandering about. duàn gěng piāo píng
Fear the dragon before, fear the tiger after. qián pà lóng,hòu pà hǔ
The pen labors on the ideas of the mind.. xīn zhī bǐ gēng
correct evil doings and revert to good deeds. gǎi xíng qiān shàn
under the moon and before the flowers. yuè xià huā qián