invaded
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh e nzh UL UL ch n, meaning that the Chinese mainland is invaded and occupied by the enemy. From a new account of the world: light slander
Idiom explanation
Shenzhou: China; Lu Shen: land without water.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in his book Shishuoxinyu · light slander: "Duke Huan entered Luoyang, crossed huaisi, practiced the Northern Territory, climbed pingchenglou with his colleagues, looked at the Central Plains, and said with emotion:" so the land of China sank and the hills were empty for a hundred years, and Wang Yifu and other people had to take responsibility for it! "
Idiom usage
It refers to the loss of land. example although it is not the time for China to sink, our military defense should not be taken lightly.
Idiom story
In 306 A.D., Sima Yue poisoned emperor Hui of Jin Dynasty and established emperor Huai of Jin Dynasty. He and Wang Yan, the leader of Qingtan sect, controlled the government. As a result, the government was overthrown by Liu Yuan, the northern Xiongnu. Fifty years later, Huan Wen led the army to recover Luoyang from Jiangling. After the restoration of Luoyang, Huan Wen was filled with emotion. Wang Yan and others made the land of China sink, and the prosperous Luoyang became a ruin.
Chinese PinYin : shén zhōu lù chén
invaded
A thousand miles of divine friendship. qiān lǐ shén jiāo
an oil lamp before the statue of buddha. qīng dēng gǔ fó
hold sb . 's whip and follow his stirrup. zhí biān suí dèng
practise bribery or receive bribes publicly. huò lù gōng xíng
the melon is sweet , but the stalk is bitter. gān guā kǔ dì