Sea, water and mulberry fields
Haishuisangtian, Chinese vocabulary, Pinyin is h ǎ ishu ǐ s ā ngTi á n, which means you can change the sea into Sangtian. It means that things have changed a lot. From the miscellaneous songs of Emperor Wu of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
One of the miscellaneous songs of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty written by Wei Yingwu of the Tang Dynasty: "the sea, the water and the mulberry fields are overturned, and the peach is ripe four or five times in the middle."
Idiom usage
In recent years, peach blossom is still on the edge of the county. The hermit of Donggao
Chinese PinYin : hǎi shuǐ sāng tián
Sea, water and mulberry fields
too beautiful to be absorbed all at once. měi bù shèng shōu
attend to trifles to the neglect of essentials. juān běn zhú mò
strict and fair in meting out rewards and punishments. shǎng fá yán míng
point to a hill and talk about grindstone -- make concealed reference to something. zhǐ shān shuō mò
utter dreary cries and screams. guǐ kū shén hào