Blind wind and astringent rain
Blind wind and astringent rain, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m á NGF ē ngs è y ǔ, which means blind wind and strange rain, and refers to obscure poetic style. From Xu Yuantan's preface to poetry.
Analysis of Idioms
Blind wind and rain
The origin of Idioms
Qian Qianyi's preface to Xu Yuantan's poems in Qing Dynasty: "it's better to have a long sunny day than to have a blind wind and rain; it's better to have a clear channel and a narrow flow than to have a muddy sand."
Idiom usage
It can be used as an object, attribute, weather, etc.
Blind wind and astringent rain
there are spots even on the sun. - jīn wú zú chì,rén wú wán rén
worry about troubles of one 's own imagining - yōng rén zì rǎo
slip over nothing whether big or small - jù xì wú yí