Horse Hedgehog
Ma Mao Hou Zhe, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ǎ m á ow è izh é, which means strong wind and bad weather. It's from the trip to the north gate of Ji.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Bao Zhao's "Dai Sui Ji Bei men Xing" said: "the wind blows hard, the sand floats; the horse hair shrinks like a hedgehog, and the horn bow cannot be opened."
Idiom usage
Example the new wind is simple, the dust is blowing on the surface, and the human shadow is slanting. Pu Songling's poem "wind on the way home" in the Qing Dynasty the weather in the desert is really changeable. Just now, the sky was clear, but now it's windy.
Chinese PinYin : mǎ máo wèi zhé
Horse Hedgehog
struggle in a desperate or hopeless situation for survival. sǐ zhōng qiú huó
lead a befuddled life as if drunk or in a dream. zuì sǐ mèng shēng
thousand finished and hundred perfected. qiān liǎo bǎi dàng