Auspicious weather
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Xi á NGF ē ngsh í y ǔ, which means good weather. More metaphors of Ender. It comes from Zhang Di Ji in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Hong of the Jin Dynasty wrote in the later Han Dynasty, Emperor Zhang: "if the lady's way is better than the lower, then Yin and Yang will be in harmony with the upper, and then the auspicious wind and rain will cover the distance, then the Yidi and mude will arrive again."
Idiom usage
In the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty and Fan Ye's the book of the later Han Dynasty, biography of Lu Gong: "then Yin and yang are in harmony, and then ~, covering the distance."
Chinese PinYin : xiáng fēng shí yǔ
Auspicious weather
barter the trunk for the branches. qù běn jiù mò
Know everything from one thing. yǐ yī zhī wàn