Calamities and disasters
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h è nghu ò f ē iz ā I, which means an unexpected and unexplained disaster. From the peach blossom.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of Yuan Wu Ming's Bi Tao Hua: "it's not because of my false spleen that I love you, but because I'm afraid that my pink face and fragrant cheeks will arouse your secret mind, which will lead to disaster."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to an unexpected disaster. Example: Ming Xuchen's the story of killing a dog: a private sigh of welcome spring: "the king of our hospital is virtuous, and there is no competition in the world. It's true that a family has a good wife, and a husband will not suffer from calamities. "
Calamities and disasters
be contented in poverty and devoted to things spiritual - ān pín lè dào
well armed with armour and weapons - pī jiān zhí ruì
peel off the skin and pluck out the sinews - chōu jīn bāo pí
What one hears is false, but what one sees is true - ěr wén shì xū,yǎn guān wéi shí
indulge in arbitrary decisions and peremptory actions - dú duàn dú xíng