Unexpected changes
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is bi à nhu à B à C è, meaning changeable and unpredictable. It comes from the epitaph of Ma Jun, the young supervisor in the palace by Han Yu of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate, object and attributive; it can be used to describe many changes but not definite; it can be used as an example; it can be used to describe the antithesis of rhyme and poetry, and it is necessary to call them both, but it is necessary to look at the upper sentence, so that people can't think of the next sentence, so that they can see the unexpected changes.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: unpredictable, changeable antonym: unchangeable
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu of Tang Dynasty wrote in the epitaph of Ma Jun, the young supervisor in the palace: "when it was, I saw the king in the North Pavilion, still in the deep valley of the high mountain area, and the dragon and tiger changed unpredictably."
Idiom explanation
It's unpredictable.
Unexpected changes
as soon as the sun reaches the meridian it declines - rì zhōng zé yí
evoke memories of the past while living in the present - fǔ jīn dào xī
a woman of low birth may marry into the purple - fū róng qī guì