Pull out the tree and shake the mountain
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B á sh ù h à NSH ā n, which means to pull up a big tree and shake a high mountain; it describes great momentum. From three changes of Nezha
The origin of Idioms
The fourth part of the three changes of Nezha written by Wu Mingshi in Ming Dynasty: "the rain that calls for rain is pouring, the strong wind that blows for wind roars wildly, the earth is collapsing, and the trees are pulling up to shake the mountains."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive. Love is an irresistible force. It makes the coward brave and the fool wise. It makes people have the power to pull up trees and shake mountains in an instant, creating unparalleled beauty or delicacy. Without love, there is no world. Su Shuyang's romance in yutangyuan
Pull out the tree and shake the mountain
Sit on the fishing boat in spite of the storm - rèn píng fēng làng qǐ,wěn zuò diào yú chuán
Dare to be angry but dare not speak - gǎn nù ér bù gǎn yán
The upper mausoleum is replaced by the lower - shàng líng xià tì