wind and rain sweeping across a gloomy sky-a grim and grave situation
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is f ē ngy ǔ R ú P á n, which means to describe the great wind and rain. It comes from "Zhaobei Suoyan · Yiwen · Ding Xiucai's miraculous skills".
Idiom explanation
Paraphrase Pan: big stone.
The origin of Idioms
Sun Guangxian's Zhaobei Suoyan · Yiwen · Ding Xiucai's miraculous Art: "the poem monk Guan Xiu's Xiake says:" the wind and rain are as black as a rock at dusk. Don't I know where to go? "
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate and attributive. The body of sorrow and disease, sitting alone in the fighting room, surrounded by the forest, stormy as a rock, who will hear when the rich and powerful come to cry for help. (Liang Qichao's comments on Sino Japanese negotiations) 2. When we live in a clear world and celebrate our motherland's future and personal destiny, it's easy to think of those stormy days and friends who had been in trouble together (selected by Ke Ling's prose Huai Fu Lei)
wind and rain sweeping across a gloomy sky-a grim and grave situation
ride with lax reins -- let things take their natural course - xìn mǎ yóu jiāng
a single spark can start a prairie fire - xīng huǒ liáo yuán
one 's heart ached as if pierced by ten thousand arrows - luàn jiàn cuán xīn
The enforcement of law is aimed at creating a society in which no penalty is needed. - xíng qī wú xíng