fortunes or misfortunes alternate
Fortune and misfortune are changeable. As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu ò f ú w ú ch á ng, which means that fortune and misfortune have no fixed convention. It comes from the story of the heart of the Qin, the moon at the gate of changmen, written by sun Meixi of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
They are used as predicates, attributives and objects
Analysis of Idioms
Adversity and fortune are common
The origin of Idioms
Sun Meixi of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the story of Qin Xin · changmen Wangyue: "misfortunes and blessings are changeable. It's hard to decide whether one's happiness is good or bad. If the emperor repents one day, the empress will be proud to return. Why is it sad?"
Idiom explanation
There is no fixed rule of referring to misfortune and happiness.
fortunes or misfortunes alternate
decide on awards on the basis of merit - zhào gōng xíng shǎng
one 's mind is burning with grief - chóu cháng jiǔ zhuǎn
be made of such sound material that the fall could not harm it - wén fēng bù dòng