miserable conditions
It's a Chinese idiom, Q ī f ē NGK ǔ y ǔ, which means to describe bad weather. Later, it is used to refer to miserable situation. From Zuo Zhuan, the fourth year of Zhaogong.
Idiom explanation
Sad wind: cold wind; bitter rain: long rain.
The origin of Idioms
In the fourth year of Zhaogong, Zuo Zhuan: "there is no sad wind in spring and no bitter rain in autumn."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: rain and wind, rain and wind as dark as rain and wind
Idiom usage
As the subject, object, attribute; refers to the miserable situation. If we live here, we can't make it. Why don't we spend a few more years with him before the color fades. In Qing Dynasty, when he won the 62nd chapter of the romance of the Sui and Tang Dynasties, he met autumn. How could he feel the miserable wind and cold rain, the wild geese singing insects, and all the scenery in front of him. The third discount of "xiaoxiangyu" by Yang Xianzhi in Yuan Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : qī fēng lěng yǔ
miserable conditions
want one 's old bones to be buried in one 's hometown. yè luò huī gēn
ruin the state and destroy the race. wáng guó miè zhǒng
take hold of bushes and trees to pull oneself up. pān téng lǎn gě
mountains fall and the earth splits. shān bēng dì chè