miserable conditions
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Q ī f ē ngch ǔ y ǔ, which means to describe the bad weather or the miserable situation. It is the same as "miserable wind and rain". It's from "the people's language in the middle of the earth - the snail demon".
explain
It is used to describe the bad weather or the miserable situation. It is the same as "miserable wind and rain".
source
Cheng Lin of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the words of the people in this area: the snail demon: "when the wind and rain are bleak, I often think about going back."
Discrimination of words
Synonyms: miserable wind and rain, miserable wind and cold rain
Foulweather
Examples of idioms: in Cheng Lin's the language of the people in this area Tian Luo Yao in the Qing Dynasty: "every time when the wind and rain are bleak, I often think about going back."
Degree of common use: Average
Emotional color: commendatory words
Grammatical usage: used as subject, object and attribute; refers to miserable situation
Idiom structure: United
Time of emergence: Modern Times
miserable conditions
Turn the tables on the right and stir up chaos - fǎn zhèng bō luàn
Under the heavy reward, there must be brave men - zhòng shǎng zhī xià,bì yǒu yǒng fū