Withered grass
Withered grass, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ū P é ngdu à NC à o, which means that it is easy to drift with the wind, so it is also used to refer to involuntary and difficult to trace. From selected Chinese Folktales: six brothers.
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
The origin of Idioms
"Six brothers in selected Chinese Folktales:" after the girl left home, she drifted around like withered grass. "
Idiom explanation
withered and broken grass. Because it's easy to drift with the wind, it's also used as a metaphor to describe that you can't help yourself and it's hard to determine your whereabouts.
Chinese PinYin : kū péng duàn cǎo
Withered grass
learn about customs and habits of the country one goes to. rù guó wèn sú
hundred generations of root and branches. běn zhī bǒi shì