Fog and cloud
The Chinese idiom, w ù C ǎ NY ú NCH ó u in pinyin, means a solemn and desolate atmosphere. It comes from an Xi of Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Source: Yuan Anxi's poem "the auspicious way home at the beginning of mid winter" says: "the fog is miserable, the clouds are sorrowful, the dusk is overcast, and the traveler's son is lamenting." In Yuan Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's book Maling Road, the fourth fold: "all the generals came to help fight, shouting to kill, and the place was full of sorrow."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Examples
When a general is wounded, when a soldier is killed, the sky is darkened, the sun is darkened, the ground is cracked, the smoke is flying, the mountain falls, and the sea falls. The 27th chapter of the complete biography of Shuoyue by Qian Cai in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : wù cǎn yún chóu
Fog and cloud
study from others on halfway , lost sb . 's own strongness. shòu líng shī bù
for having heard it many times. ěr shú néng xiáng
for the state and the people. wéi guó wéi mín
dip one 's finger and water for sth.. rǎn zhǐ chuí xián