Broken down
Dilapidated, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ò w ǎ Tu í Yu á n, which means that the roof is damaged and the wall collapses. It describes a dilapidated scene. It comes from the record of lingxutai written by Su Shi of Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
After the World War II or after the disaster, you can't see the west of Luoyang, a palace built by Zhang Jian.
The origin of Idioms
Song Sushi's "lingxu Taiji" said: "considering its prosperity for a while, the great and the beautiful, the firm and immovable are only a hundred times more than the Taiwan! However, after several generations, there is no one who wants to make it look like it's broken down. "
Idiom explanation
The roof tiles were damaged and the walls collapsed. Describe a scene of ruin.
Chinese PinYin : pò wǎ tuí yuán
Broken down
cut the dress according to one 's figure. liàng tǐ cái yī
the few are no match for the many. sì bù niù liù
the moon shining on the beams of the house -- thinking of a friend. luò yuè wū liáng