miserable conditions
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Q ī f ē NGH á NY ǔ, which means to describe the bad weather or the miserable situation. From Wu Yao Zhi · Mu Lei · Liu.
Idiom explanation
[idiom]: miserable wind and cold rain [Pinyin]: Q ī f ē NGH á NY ǔ [explanation]: it describes the bad weather, or refers to the miserable situation. It is the same as "miserable wind and rain".
Idioms and allusions
[source]: in "Wu Yao Zhi · Mu Lei · Liu" written by Bao Guang of Qing Dynasty, "Fang Qi is miserable in wind and rain, apricot withers and peach remains, mountain roads are depressed, clouds are gloomy, moss is barren and moss is defeated, and emotions are on the rise and soul is on the wane."
Discrimination of words
Phonetic code: qfhy synonym: miserable wind and rain, miserable wind and cold rain usage: used as subject, object and attribute; refers to miserable situation
Chinese PinYin : qī fēng hán yǔ
miserable conditions
offense of imposing lighter or heavier sentences than necessary in ancient china. chū rù rén zuì
search for the origin and the outcome of the development of things. yuán shǐ fǎn zhōng