A myriad of changes
Nine changes, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Ji à Bi à NSH í Hu à, meaning to change. From the preface to the seven signatures of Yunji.
Analysis of Idioms
[similar words] change endlessly antonyms] remain unchanged rhyming words] are powerful, fearful, old and dead, bullying, connecting the preceding and the following, not knowing what to do, from small to big, from small to big, from small to big, from small to big, from small to big, from small to big, from small to big, from small to big, from small to big, from small to big, from small to big, from small to big to big, from small to big to big, from small to big to small
The origin of Idioms
The preface to the seven signatures of Yunji written by Zhang Junfang of the Song Dynasty: "to the best of the three scenes, to the best of the nine changes, we should explore each other and call each other the best."
Idiom usage
It refers to many changes. Example Mozi Gongshu: "Gongshu pan nine sets up the opportunity to attack the city, and Mozi nine distances."
Chinese PinYin : jiǔ biàn shí huà
A myriad of changes
There is nothing wrong with it. wú shì wú mò
to live is like being a lodger in the world , and to die is like returning home. shēng jì sǐ guī
a man of tremendous promise. dòng liáng zhī cái
extort excessive taxes and levies. hèng zhēng kē liǎn
The same source and the same flow. tóng yuán gòng liú
there is no lack of people of that ilk. shí fān yǒu tú
evil with a security blanket. guān cāng láo shǔ