rescued from desperate situation
The Chinese idiom, K ū sh ù f é ngch ū n in pinyin, means that the withered tree has regained its vitality; it refers to the survival of the dead. It comes from the legend of Jingde, the monk of Dacheng mountain in tangzhou.
The origin of Idioms
"The monk of Dacheng mountain in tangzhou" asks: "how about when the withered trees are in spring?" The teacher said, "it is rare in the world."
Idiom usage
As an object, predicate, attribute; refers to regain life. Let's fight for a family. It's just like rain for dry seedlings and spring for dead trees. The fourth chapter of rensuqin by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty
rescued from desperate situation
a place where all kinds of people live - wǔ fāng zá cuò
have edges and corners -- aggressive and sharp-minded - yǒu léng yǒu jiǎo
the sight of familiar objects fills one with infinite melancholy - dǔ wù shāng qíng
attack the enemy at his weak points - pī gàng dǎo xū