tempestuous storm
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is h à IL à NGJ à NGT à o, which means turbulent and frightening waves. It refers to dangerous environment or sharp and fierce struggle. It comes from the collection of works of yushantang haiyunlou.
Notes on Idioms
Frighten: frighten; wave: big wave.
The origin of Idioms
Tian Ying of Tang Dynasty wrote in the collection of yushantang essays haiyunlou: "when people are quiet, they are always alert when they think about the stormy waves of the previous scriptures."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to a dangerous environment or a sharp and fierce struggle. example before the age of hairpin, I traveled overseas, went to the hometown of wild smoke and heavy rain, and was in danger of being shocked by the waves. The sixth chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty
tempestuous storm
with aching head and knitted brows - jí shǒu cù é
changes arise from the elbow and armpit . 2 . confusion starts from one 's side or friends - shì shēng zhǒu yè
never yield in spite of reverses - bǎi zhé bù náo
want one 's old bones to be buried in one 's hometown - yè luò huī gēn