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In Chinese, Pinyin is B ù Hu ā n é RS à n, which means to break up unhappily. It's from xingshihengyan.
Idiom explanation
San: leave, break up.
The origin of Idioms
In Ming Dynasty, Feng Menglong's Xingshi Hengyan, Huang Xiucai's Jade Horse Pendant: "all the guests broke up in bitterness."
Analysis of Idioms
Wife and children are separated and scattered in a crowd
Idiom usage
It's used as a predicate or complement. It's used in disagreement or emotional breakdown. example the young master was so ashamed that he broke up unhappily. Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio Xin Shiniang in the Qing Dynasty two friends, who were originally very close, broke up in discord because of an unintentional remark.
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the mountain falls and the earth gives way - shān bēng dì xiàn