Out of the blue
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ǐ Ti ā nzh ī L ǜ, meaning to describe unnecessary or unfounded worries and worries. It's the same as "worrying about the sky". Also save for "Qi worry". It's from just a collection of worries about tianru.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: worry about the sky, worry about the future
The origin of Idioms
Lu Xun's "just a collection of worries about tianru" said: "I once had a" groundless worry "that in the future, Chinese female students would lose the ability to breast feed, and every family would have to hire a nurse."
Idiom usage
As the subject and object, it is often used to admonish people.
Chinese PinYin : qǐ tiān zhī lǜ
Out of the blue
rise step by step in the world. bù bù dēng gāo
provide for oneself and live comfortably. yǎng zūn chǔ yōu
talents gather from everywhere. sì fāng fú còu