Flying awning
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Du à ng à NGF à IP é ng, which means like a broken branch or a flying Artemisia. It's used to describe people's irregular life. It's the same as "broken skeleton and floating awning". From the day before the demolition.
The origin of Idioms
Lu You of Song Dynasty wrote a poem the day before the number was removed: "wandering is a career everywhere, but it's hard to see."
Idiom usage
A young lady of a noble family has been left alone all her life. It's as if it's hard to predict her life or death. (Wenkang's biography of heroes and heroines in Qing Dynasty, Chapter 22)
Flying awning
combine indigenous and foreign methods - tǔ yáng jié hé