earth-shaking changes
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ì f ù Ti ā NF ā n, which means (1) great changes in description. ② It describes the order as extremely chaotic. It's very noisy. It's from the eighteen pictures of Hu Jia.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Shang of Tang Dynasty's "Hujia 18 Pai" 6: "earth shaking, who knows? Now we are looking at Beidou in the south. "
Idiom usage
Since the reform and opening up, great changes have taken place in China's rural areas. (2) the present is better than the past, the earth is turning upside down, generous and generous. ——In Mao Zedong's the people's liberation army occupied Nanjing, Baoyu used a knife and stick to look for life and death, which turned the world upside down. ——A dream of Red Mansions. What do you say about the lintel of an official's office? The humble scholar is ordinary and looks like the sky. The times change and the situation changes. In order to turn the earth upside down, you flee to the people. (Yuan Shi Hui's the story of you boudoir
Analysis of Idioms
The synonym is earth shaking, earth shattering, and the present is different from the past
earth-shaking changes
Work at sunrise and rest at sunrise - rì chū ér zuò,rì rù ér xī
read hastily and without thinking - hú lún tūn zǎo