desolate sight
The Chinese idiom "Ni ǎ ot í Hu ā Lu" in pinyin means to describe a desolate scene.
Entry
desolate sight
Pinyin
niǎotíhuāluò
Citation explanation
Description of the desolate scene. The song music history "Yang Taizhen waizhuan" volume: "this to Jianmen, birds, flowers, green mountains, no more than help me mourn for my concubine." Wang Tingna, Ming Dynasty, wrote in the book of planting jade, promoting the meeting: "I cherish the Luan curtain, the solitary jade tapestry, and I feel desolate several times. The heartbroken bird's song and flower's falling are full of heartache. " Lin Mengchu of Ming Dynasty volume 2-5: Si Hu went to Xiangyang from then on. Along the way, the birds were singing and the flowers were falling and the scenery was sad. He just wanted to look forward to the slave. The seventh chapter of "Shuo Hu Quan Zhuan" in Qing Dynasty. And listen to Lingnan yingnong tongue, birds singing flowers do not worry.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in a desolate scene.
desolate sight
a subjective person who expresses different opinions - rù zhǔ chū nú
Better be a chicken than a cow - nìng wéi jī kǒu,wú wéi niú hòu