A stone fell to the ground
A stone falls to the ground. This idiom comes from the 19th chapter of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin of Qing Dynasty. It means to let go of one's heart.
Source of allusion
Chapter 19 of a dream of Red Mansions written by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty: "after the second time, Baoyu suddenly went away, and he and his two were the same scene. Mother and son knew better in their hearts that more and more a stone fell to the ground, and it was an unexpected thought. They could rest assured that they had no other intention."
Idiom information
Idiom Pinyin: y ī Ku à ISH í Toulu ò led ì
Chinese PinYin : yī kuài shí tou luò le dì
A stone fell to the ground
houses have adequate supplies and people live in contentment. jiā jǐ mín zú
Vertebral burying and tunneling. chuí mái chuān jué
psychological offense is the best of tactics. gōng xīn wèi shàng
A thousand feet without branches. qiān rèn wú zhī