suffer a disastrous decline
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī Lu ò Qi ā nzh à, originally used to describe a sudden change in the sound of the piano from high to low; now it's down a lot. It's used to describe a sharp decline in reputation, status or economic status. From listening to Yingshi playing the piano.
The origin of Idioms
Tang Hanyu's listening to Yingshi playing the piano: it's impossible to rise to the top and fall to the top.
Idiom usage
It's more formal; it's predicate and attribute; it's derogatory.
Examples
Wang Mai of Song Dynasty: when he Shuai Qi is on the rise, he loses his power and is strong, but he moves fast. When he rushes, he will rise more than a hundred feet and sit and watch him fly.
Ye tingguan, Qing Dynasty, the remnant manuscript of Jiang Shanyu in the story of Oubo fishing.
Dr. Sun Yat Sen's national salvation with personality: why has our international status plummeted? This is because we Chinese are not self-motivated, so we degenerate.
So when Xi Kui got married, Kunling's momentum suddenly fell, and the actor took away the bull's ear. ——126 chapters of the popular romance of the Republic of China
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: a torrent of water, going from bad to worse, the river is going from bad to worse
Antonym: ascend to the sky step by step, forge ahead, advance by leaps and bounds
Chinese PinYin : yī luò qiān zhàng
suffer a disastrous decline
make a fetish of somebody or something. fèng rú shén míng
severity in speech and fairness in principle -- as the utterance of an upright person. cí yán yì zhèng