Five changes
Shibianwuhua is a Chinese word, and its pronunciation is sh í Bi à NW à Hu à, which means it is changeable. It comes from the family precepts of Yan family, Guixin.
Idioms and allusions
Source: Yan Zhitui's "Yan's family precepts · Guixin" in the Northern Qi Dynasty: "there are Zhu Shi and various illusions in the world. They are still able to walk on fire and blade, plant melons and move wells. All of a sudden, they are changeable."
Discrimination of words
Usage: used as predicate, object, attribute; used for change, etc. synonym: changeable, ever-changing antonym immutable idiom explanation: refers to changeable. commonly used degree: General emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: as predicate, object, attribute; used for change idiom structure: combined generation time: Ancient
Chinese PinYin : shí biàn wǔ huà
Five changes
zeng shen has killed a person. zēng shēn shā rén
one who tries not to offend anybody. hǎo hǎo xiān shēng
have a well-deserved reputation. míng bù xū chuán
birds of the same feather flock together. shēng qì xiāng qiú