cease abruptly
Sudden stop is a Chinese idiom, pronounced Ji á R á n é RZH ǐ, Jia: onomatopoeia. Describes the sudden termination of a sound due to interruption. It comes from the general meaning of literature and history, ten evils of ancient prose.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Xuecheng's ten evils in the general meaning of literature and history of ancient prose in Qing Dynasty: "the change of Fu's articles is similar to that of ghosts and gods, but the fight comes and stops suddenly. Why is there no such scene?"
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as adverbial; to describe a sudden stop. (1) Li Changqi's "cut lamp Yu Hua. V. Jia Yunhua's resurrection" says: "Ping Ping receives the cup, goes to his wife, drinks the wine and says:" I'm just a brother and sister, and I'm in love with you. How can I be a husband suddenly? " The women in the border also help each other. They drink as much as they can (2) the fourteenth chapter of Li Lvyuan's Qiludeng: "suddenly the gongs and drums come to an abrupt end, but the play has already stopped." (3) Ji Yun's "notes of Yuewei thatched cottage. This is what I heard one": "Chen Gong chide said: '" How dare you say that to me? " Suddenly, it stopped, and odeng did it again. " (4) Gaoyang's "yuzuozhuzhulian" Volume II: "this sentence, suddenly stopped, sounds particularly noticeable." 5. Liu Chengzhang's Ansai waist drum: "when it stops suddenly, the world is so quiet that people feel very strange to her."
cease abruptly
slow of tongue and clumsy of utterance - zhuō zuǐ bèn sāi
The bee is infatuated with the butterfly - fēng mí dié liàn
Knowing is knowing, not knowing is not knowing - zhī zhǐ wéi zhī zhī,bù zhī wéi bù zhǐ
surrender one 's power to another at one 's own peril - tài ē dào chí
to have a fancy for prostitutes - rě cǎo zhān huā