flames of battle raging everywhere
Liantianfenghuo, a Chinese idiom, is Li á NTI āēē nghu ǒ in pinyin, which describes that wars are burning all over the country. It comes from the collection of CAI Zhonglang, the first chapter of the foreign chronicles, the ten annals of the Han Dynasty by Cai Yong of the Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to Cai Yong's collection of CAI Zhonglang, the first chapter of the foreign chronicles, the ten annals of the Han Dynasty, "Xianbei was in the middle of the clouds at that time. In January, there were endless wars, and the dust was in the sky."
Idiom usage
The war has been burning all over the country. (Li Dazhao's poem "turmoil in the southern sky · Shi Jiang's going to the country, recalling heaven's asking about the army") and Peng Sunyi's poem "Luochuan meets Wang Dayi" in the Qing Dynasty: "liantianfenghuozi's long journey, cangmangjiangshan's entering the enemy." In the eighth chapter of the trace of the moon and flowers: "looking south, you can see a great deal of chaos; wandering West, you can see hazelnut."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms everywhere antonyms of peace and prosperity
Chinese PinYin : lián tiān fēng huǒ
flames of battle raging everywhere
take the matter on its merits. jiù shì lùn shì
force the obstinate to yield. cuī gāng wéi róu
Satirize virtue and recite merits. fěng dé sòng gōng