Dead branches spring again
The dead trees have come back to life. It is a metaphor for experiencing setbacks and gaining vitality.
Idiom explanation
[idiom]: dead branches spring again [Pinyin]: K ū zh ī Z à ICH ū n ū [explanation]: dead trees are back to life. It is a metaphor for experiencing setbacks and gaining vitality.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: Su Zhe of Song Dynasty wrote in the Nanjing Xie Biao written by Chen Ruyi, a scholar: "it's not to say that the saint's grace has not been abandoned, the mulberry and elm can be seen, the withered wood can be regenerated, and the rain and dew can be stained again."
Discrimination of words
Let's take an example to make a sentence: marriage was originally predestined in previous life, so I asked a white rabbit to lead me. It was hard, but now I'm happy to see the withered branches spring again. In Ming Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's the story of the white rabbit, reunion, kzzc, antonym, dead wood regenerates, antonym, dead tree decays, usage, object, attribute, and vitality
Chinese PinYin : kū zhī zài chūn
Dead branches spring again
daily call to religious life. mù gǔ chén zhōng
women who died in defence of their honour. sān zhēn jiǔ liè
the sincerity of offering the warmth of the sun to sb. xiàn pù zhī chén
roll up one 's sleeves and raise one 's fists to fight. xuān quán luō xiù
A moth that grows up by accumulating errors. jī é chéng dù