warning signals of approaching enemy forces are seen on all sides
The Chinese idiom, which means L á ngy ā ns ì Q ǐ, means that there are fireworks everywhere, which means that the frontier is not peaceful. It comes from the chapter of Mao in Youyang Zazu.
Notes on Idioms
Wolf smoke: smoke from burning wolf dung when the ancient border guards called the police.
The origin of Idioms
Duan Chengshi's "You Yang Za Zu · Mao Pian" in Tang Dynasty: "the smoke of wolf dung goes straight up, and the beacon fire uses it."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as predicate, attribute, complement; to describe war and turmoil. This fire tube is full of twigs and can blow like smoke; it really can't let him go. (the 70th chapter of the complete biography of Shuoyue by Qian Cai in Qing Dynasty)
Analysis of Idioms
It's peaceful and peaceful
warning signals of approaching enemy forces are seen on all sides
high in the sky hang the sun and the moon - rì yuè hé bì