topple the mountains and overturn the seas
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p á ISH ā nd ǎ oh ǎ I, which means powerful and powerful. It comes from Zizhi Tongjian, the second year of Emperor Gaozong's Jianwu of Qi Dynasty and Xiyu on June 24.
The origin of Idioms
"Zizhitongjian · the second year of Emperor Gaozong's Jianwu in Qi Dynasty" says: "in the past, the emperor Shizu rode hundreds of thousands of horses on foot with the power of returning to the mountains and pouring into the sea. In the south, he was near Guabu, and all the counties came down." Yang Wanli, Song Dynasty, wrote in his book the happy rain on June 24 when he was ill: "at the beginning of the disease, the enemy was very strong, and it was hard to be defeated."
Idiom usage
This kind of tide can not be resisted by any stubborn force. Zou Taofen's "thousands of young people who have made great efforts since the Anti Japanese War" and Zhu De's "miscellaneous chants on the revolution of 1911": "~ the people's power, which led to the Chinese revolution."
Analysis of Idioms
It's a world shaking word
topple the mountains and overturn the seas
all over the mountains and plains - mǎn shān biàn yě
orphaned boys and girls under 15 years of age - liù chǐ zhī gū