It's a drought
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h à Nb á w é in ü è, which means drought. It comes from Shi Da Ya Yun Han.
The origin of Idioms
"Poetry · Daya · Yunhan" said: "drought Kui abuse, such as burning."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: drought is a disaster [antonym]: he Bo is in danger
Idiom usage
After the earthquake, the fog is white, the sun and the moon are not bright, the drought is cruel, the big thief is from the horizontal, the blood is red, the common people are restless, the reprimand is tired, almost caused by the weight of treacherous officials. (Biography of Huangfu in the later Han Dynasty)
Idiom story
In ancient myths and legends, because there is a lot of heat in her body, the daughter of the Yellow Emperor often suffers from drought wherever she goes. People don't welcome her and think she is the God of plague. The Yellow Emperor placed her in the north of Chishui. She had to go out at night and stay with the night forks, but they often do bad things, and droughts often happen.
Chinese PinYin : hàn bá wèi nüè
It's a drought
Change the soup but not the dressing. huàn tāng bù huàn yào
Birds are frightened by fish. niǎo jīng yú kuì
surrendering oneself to the cannibal bandits to substitute for his younger brother they captured , stating that he himself is fatter. xiōng féi dì shòu
water flowing out in a trickle takes a long time to exhaust. xì shuǐ cháng liú