an unexpected occurrence
A storm on the ground is a storm on the ground. It refers to an unexpected dispute or accident.
Idioms and allusions
Liu Yuxi's Zhuzhici of Tang Dynasty: "it's better to hate people's heart than water, so it's easy to make waves." Su Shi's poem "San Si GUI" in the Song Dynasty: "children say that the world is evil, and there is a storm in the land. "When King Zhou saw Jia's fall from a building and died, he was very upset and regretted. (Xu Zhonglin, Ming Dynasty, Chapter 30 of the romance of Fengshen)
Discrimination of words
This idiom is used as an example: King Zhou was very upset when he saw Jia's fall from a building and died. (Chapter 30 of Fengshen Yanyi by Xu Zhonglin of Ming Dynasty) degree of common use: common emotional color: commendatory words; grammatical usage: as object and attribute; metaphor: unexpected dispute or accident; idiom structure: partial formal generation time: ancient times
an unexpected occurrence
exchange solemn vows and pledges - hǎi yuē shān méng
seek after glory by selling out one 's own country - mài guó qiú róng
preoccupied with the nation , forget about his family - guó ěr wàng jiā
beside oneself ( with excitement one 's excited feelings - àn nà bù zhù