Falling wind
Falling fan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is pi ā of á NLU ò h ù n, which means that there are different destinies of wealth and poverty due to chance. It also refers to the decadence of women. It comes from the appendix of haizou Yeyou written by Wang Tao in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used of a person's fate
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym: Piao fan falling fan
The origin of Idioms
In the appendix of haizou Yeyou written by Wang Tao in Qing Dynasty, it is said that all the women of good families who are destroyed by the wind and rain and who are robbed by fireworks are always there. They are wandering in the wind and falling in the wind, and they are miserable. They are dreary and dreary
Idiom explanation
It refers to the different fates of wealth and poverty due to chance. It also refers to women's depravity. It's the same as "piaojiao".
Chinese PinYin : piāo fán luò hùn
Falling wind
True gold is not afraid of fire. zhēn jīn bù pà huǒ
The duck is short and the crane is long. fú duǎn hè cháng
Search the kidney and stomach. sōu suǒ shèn wèi