a blazing prairie fire
Burning a prairie fire, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Li á oyu á NLI è Hu ǒ, meaning like a fire burning in the field, making people inaccessible. It refers to the growing and irresistible revolutionary force. It comes from the book of Shang, the first chapter of Pan Geng.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] skyrocketing fire, conflagration, conflagration, conflagration, conflagration
The origin of Idioms
"Shangshu · pangengshang" said: "if the fire in the prairie, not to you."
Idiom usage
It's formal; it's object; it's commendatory. Examples the torrent of reform and opening up is irresistible.
Chinese PinYin : liáo yuán liè huǒ
a blazing prairie fire
deduct to the very last number. chōng lèi zhì jìn
dark hair and ruddy complexion. lǜ bìn zhū yán