disaster comes
Disaster comes from the sky, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu à C ó ngTi à NJI à ng, which means to refer to the sudden occurrence of unexpected disaster. It comes from the biography of Liu Zhan in the old book of Tang Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] unexpected disaster, imminent disaster, unexpected disaster
The origin of Idioms
Liu Zhanzhuan, an old book of the Tang Dynasty, said, "on the day when Xianyun Zong called for the benefactor of lotus, he didn't touch his salary. When he took medicine, it was not synonymous. This was a disaster that came from heaven, and the culprits did it themselves."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as an object; refers to an unexpected disaster. It's the disaster that goes to the earth. The 46th chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in the Ming Dynasty and the second chapter of Guan Hanqing's Xie Tianxiang in the Yuan Dynasty: "ah, if you want to sing a song of Mantingfang in Dongpo, you will find a carved plate of fragrant mist, but disaster will come from the sky as early as possible."
Idioms and allusions
Tang Yizong's daughter, Princess Tongchang, died of invalid medical treatment. He was angry with the medical officer and put Han zongzhao, Kang Zhongyin and more than 300 people of the two families into prison for the crime of "invalid medication". Liu Zhan, the prime minister and Minister of the Ministry of punishment, wrote a letter to admonish them that they had tried their best. Both the government and the public believed that this was a natural disaster, punishing those who did not commit crimes, so they were demoted to be the governor of Kangzhou.
Chinese PinYin : huò cóng tiān jiàng
disaster comes
Sweep the pot and scrape the stove. sǎo guō guā zào
keep a tight rein on self and cut down on expense. jǐn shēn jié yòng
a few isolated words and phrases. piàn yán zhǐ yǔ