Fall apart
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is s ā nglu ò w ǎ Ji ě, which means like mulberry leaves wither and roof tiles disintegrate. It is said that the situation is so bad that it can't be controlled. It comes from the biography of Kong Rong in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Kong Rong in the book of the later Han Dynasty, "Gao Ding is in the temple. Who is the Zhang! The situation can be seen in the collapse. "
Idiom usage
It refers to the situation, etc.
Analysis of Idioms
To fall to pieces
Chinese PinYin : sāng luò wǎ jiě
Fall apart
keep thy shop and thy shop will keep thee.. huáng tiān bù fù yǒu xīn rén
study by the light of glowworms and the reflection of snow. jí yíng yìng xuě
Water can carry or capsize a boat. shuǐ kě zài zhōu,yì kě fù zhōu
lofty sentiments and aspirations. háo qíng zhuàng zhì
be thrown away and swept clean. sǎo dì yǐ jìn