Rise and fall
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ì NTU ì Xi ā och á ng, meaning increase or decrease; change; the same as "advance or retreat". It comes from the preface to the posthumous letter of shaozong Bo in Wujin village.
The origin of Idioms
Wei Yuan of the Qing Dynasty wrote the preface to the posthumous letter of shaozong Bo in Wujin Village: "at the end of Qianlong period, you were in the same Dynasty with the great scholar he Lu, and you were depressed. Therefore, when you moved in and out with the gentleman and villain in the book of songs and the book of changes, you often felt indignant and generous, and lingered for a long time. You can feel sad when you read his book."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used to change.
Rise and fall
more than a match for ten thousand men - wàn fū mò dāng
the people cannot stand the pressure of the government - mín bù kān mìng
put new wine into old bottles - jiù píng zhuāng xīn jiǔ
Far water cannot save near fire - yuǎn shuǐ jiù bù dé jìn huǒ