the sea turns into mulberry fields and vice versa
Sangtian Bihai, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā ngTi á Nb ì h ǎ I, which means that the sea becomes Sangtian, and Sangtian becomes the sea. It means that things have changed a lot. The same as "Sangtian Canghai". From Chang'an ancient times.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Vicissitudes
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Examples
Sangtian Bihai instant change, singing and dancing streamer Do not treat each other. Cui Hua Pian by Xia Wanchun in Ming Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
Lu Zhaolin's poem "Chang'an ancient style" in Tang Dynasty: "the scenery of the festival does not treat each other, the mulberry fields and the sea will change in a moment."
the sea turns into mulberry fields and vice versa
Six links and four breakthroughs - liù tōng sì pì
incite somebody to take legal proceedings against somebody else - tiáo cí jià sòng
cutting into the present-day evils - qiè zhòng shí bìng