an unexpected occurrence
A storm on the ground is a storm on the ground. It refers to an unexpected dispute or accident.
Idioms and allusions
Liu Yuxi's Zhuzhici of Tang Dynasty: "it's better to hate people's heart than water, so it's easy to make waves." Su Shi's poem "San Si GUI" in the Song Dynasty: "children say that the world is evil, and there is a storm in the land. "When King Zhou saw Jia's fall from a building and died, he was very upset and regretted. (Xu Zhonglin, Ming Dynasty, Chapter 30 of the romance of Fengshen)
Discrimination of words
This idiom is used as an example: King Zhou was very upset when he saw Jia's fall from a building and died. (Chapter 30 of Fengshen Yanyi by Xu Zhonglin of Ming Dynasty) degree of common use: common emotional color: commendatory words; grammatical usage: as object and attribute; metaphor: unexpected dispute or accident; idiom structure: partial formal generation time: ancient times
Chinese PinYin : píng dì fēng bō
an unexpected occurrence
The ghost cries and the corn flies. guǐ kū sù fēi
one 's fame spreads throughout the world. yù mǎn tiān xià
the hearts come together across the land. shuài tǔ guī xīn