one's fury beclouds the sky
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ì y à nx ū NTI ā n, which means to describe powerful, arrogant and terrible. It comes from the romance of Qing Dynasty by Cai Dongfan.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 18 of the romance of the Qing Dynasty written by Cai Dongpan: "it's just that people are in power, and people are dying. When duoergun is in Japan, there will be a king minister who can't help but drink his hatred. This time, he is thinking of taking revenge. It's time for emperor Shunzhi to issue an imperial edict to ask for advice."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Examples
In the fifth chapter of biography of heroes and heroines written by Wen Kang of Qing Dynasty: "when you see a scum, even if it is full of momentum, it looks like a pig and a dog."
Chinese PinYin : shì yàn xūn tiān
one's fury beclouds the sky
the lofty sentiments of fearing no hardships in the open. mù tiān xí dì
act towards one another like brothers and sisters. rú xiōng rú dì
one 's lips are dry and one 's mouth parched. chún gān kǒu zào