Howl and cry
The Chinese idiom, sh é NH á Ogu ǐ K ū in pinyin, is used to describe crying loudly with a shrill voice, which is the same as "crying with gods and ghosts". From Ma Ling Dao.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, the second fold of "the way of Maling" written by Wu Mingshi: "but how can the gods howl and ghosts cry, the fog is miserable, the clouds are dim, and the day is secluded."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attributive, or adverbial; used in writing. How angry! Today, the slut suddenly started to cry with a stomachache. Seeing that he was working so hard, I came to invite him. The fifth chapter of "the present situation of monsters witnessed in 20 years" and the sixty sixth chapter of "the complete story of the Water Margin" by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty: "at this time, the people in the city of Daming were running like rats and crying like ghosts."
Howl and cry
to work shame-facedly with one 's enemies - miǎn yán shì chóu
keep on repeating at great length - lián biān lěi dú
go forward with great strength and vigour - hào hào dàng dàng