bamboo shoots after a spring rain
Bamboo shoots spring up, Chinese idiom, pronunciation is y ǔ h ò uch ū ns ǔ n, which means that bamboo shoots come out after a heavy rain in spring, and grow a lot at once. Metaphor is the rapid emergence of new things. From eating bamboo shoots.
The origin of Idioms
The poem "eating bamboo shoots" written by Zhang Lei of Song Dynasty: "the spring rain is sufficient in the barren forest, and the new bamboo shoots burst into the young dragon."
Idiom usage
As an attribute or an object, it refers to something new. In China, abolishing the imperial examination and promoting schools seem to have sprung up, trying to learn from the West. On the people's democratic dictatorship by Mao Zedong
Chinese PinYin : yǔ hòu chūn sǔn
bamboo shoots after a spring rain