natural calamities and man-made misfortunes
Natural and man-made disasters, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is ti ā NZ ā IR é nhu ò, refers to natural disasters and man-made disasters. It comes from Feng Yulan, a nameless writer in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth part of Feng Yulan written by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty: "Tu Shixiong has nothing to do with it. Dare there be another natural and man-made disaster, pretending to be Tu Shixiong?"
Idiom usage
It refers to natural disasters and man-made disasters. In Ma Feng's the sun is just out of the mountain: "he also said a lot of truth that individual farmers can't resist natural and man-made disasters." But the servant grew up in a dangerous country, grew up in great age, and saw a lot. Lu Xun's letters to Tai Jingnong
Chinese PinYin : tiān zāi rén huò
natural calamities and man-made misfortunes
act according to god 's will and the desire of the people. yìng tiān shùn mín