desolate and uninhabited
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Hu ā NGW ú R é NY ā n, which describes a place that is remote and desolate and can't see other people. It's from Mu Xin's "tour of the south line: the war of liberation of Xichang".
The origin of Idioms
Mu Xin's "tour of the south line: the battle of the liberation of Xichang": "the officers and men of the army, suffering from hunger and cold, climbed over a desolate mountain with a height of more than 4200 meters.
Idiom usage
He has been in this desolate place for more than an hour, and he is afraid and cold, almost completely desperate. (Chinese book of Jiangsu Education Press, grade 6, Lesson 8, the chain of love)
Analysis of Idioms
The world of animals
desolate and uninhabited
love the subjects as if they were his own children - ài mín rú zǐ
A cup to the bow and a tiger to the market - bēi gōng shì hǔ
from the first small beginnings one can see how things will develop - jiàn wēi zhī méng
do away with all fetishes and superstitions - pò chú mí xìn