Floating and broken stem
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is pi à op é ngdu à ng à ng, which means floating grass and drifting plants are broken. It means life is unstable and wandering everywhere. It comes from the story of spring and Wu, boudoir language, written by Wang Luo in Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Examples
When Emperor Gao was in Jiujing, no matter his family died or the cauldron was broken, he knew that his son and grandson were better than to be floating and broken.
The origin of Idioms
"Did you ever have chunwu in the book of chunwu in the Ming Dynasty? When you ask about Qing Qing, you should be full of fluffy, broken stems and uncertain
Idiom explanation
The floating grasses and the drifting plants broke their stems. It refers to the unstable life and wandering everywhere.
Floating and broken stem
consider others in one 's own place - tuī jǐ jí wù
dragons and fishes jumbled together - yú lóng hùn zá
the declining age is like a candle in the wind - fēng zhú zhī nián
a cool breeze felt by all the guests - mǎn zuò fēng shēng
seem ready to come out at one 's call - hū zhī yù chū