surging
Surging, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Xi ō ngy ǒ NGP é NGP à I, describe the momentum, unstoppable. It comes from Shanglin Fu by Sima Xiangru of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Sima Xiangru's Shanglin Fu in the Han Dynasty: "it's boiling and raging."
Idiom usage
Chapter 32 of Feng Yuxiang's my life: "at the same time, the revolutionary tide in the south is rising day by day."
Idiom story
In the Western Han Dynasty, Emperor Wen advocated thrift, developed agriculture, and reduced taxes. At the same time, he also advocated "virtuous and honest people who can speak out". Jia Yi wrote to Emperor Wen in his book on political affairs, advocating different punishment methods for common people and princes and ministers when they break the law, because princes and ministers are the people around the emperor, so as not to hurt the emperor.
Chinese PinYin : xiōng yǒng péng pài
surging
despise the poor and curry favour with the rich. qī pín ài fù
husband elevated by his wife's high status or fortune. qī róng fū guì
ride with lax reins -- let things take their natural course. xìn mǎ yóu jiāng
the peach trees were in bloom and the willows were turning green. táo hóng liǔ lǜ
Abstain from extravagance rather than frugality. jiè shē nìng jiān
unable to distinguish black from white. bù fēn qīng béi
have no justifiable reason for the war. chū shī wú míng