groundless talk
Wind and rain, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē NGF ē ngy ǔ y ǔ, meaning continuous wind and rain; metaphor obstacles; also metaphor times turbulence, rumors. It comes from Pu Tian Le Yi Jian Hu.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Zhang Kejiu's "Pu Tian Le · Yi Jian Hu" Song: "wind and rain Qingming, Ying Ying Yan Guan Qing."
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's an object; it's used in people's experience. Example: the romance of the Yangs' house: watching the sky at night after graduation: "it's been a stormy time, nearly a month. Only two days later, Taizu sent troops to fight, and this happened several times. " The poem of Qing Pingle by Nalanxingde in Qing Dynasty: "the deep courtyard of Pingshan in Liuqu is full of ups and downs day by day." Huang Qingyun's "waves": "[Tao Dejiao] has gone through countless ups and downs, so she left quietly." "In the turbulent political tide, comrade Enlai bravely led the patriotic movement of students." People's daily, February 10, 1992: "the hard work of several generations has made this famous publishing house flourish." Ke Fei's "Spring Rush" 26: "if you make a lot of noise and make the dam full of ups and downs, don't you want to make people say strange things to him secretly?"
Chinese PinYin : fēng fēng yǔ yǔ
groundless talk
conform to no conventional pattern. bù luò sú tào
man 's will , not heaven , decides. rén dìng shèng tiān
the older , the more upright. jiāng guì zhī xìng
a pasture on which cattle can graze. cháng lín fēng cǎo
a phoenix from a crow 's nest. yā cháo shēng fèng