Sad and crying
The Chinese idiom, sh é NCH ó ugu ǐ K ū, means to describe a very sad. It's from Huaixiang Ji feibaojie Yin by Lu Cai of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Cai of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the story of nostalgia: the sound of flying to report victory: "Wu was very frightened. Every time he came to fight, he was defeated, and his spirits were crying."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attributive, or adverbial; used in writing. Example Feng Menglong, Ming Dynasty, Vol. 40, warning of the world: "melancholy clouds block out the sun, and murderous air fills the air. The earth is turning upside down and the spirits are crying. "
Sad and crying
the enemy approached the walls - bīng lín chéng xià