Ten rains and five winds
Ten rain five winds, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh í y ǔ w ǔ f ē ng, meaning ten days a rain, five days a wind; that is, good weather. It comes from Lun Heng.
The origin of Idioms
In Du Guangting's painting of the jiaoci of the gods of the five mountains in the former Shu Dynasty, it is said that "to support the state, to protect the Liyuan.". It is necessary to adjust the ten rains and five winds so as to ascend the crops, and to make the nine prefectures and Six Harmonies so as to bring about Yongxi. ".
Idiom usage
Good weather. example Nanfeng poetry will be in Lingjiang. Bright light. It's a good idea. Ten rain and five winds, even years to Feng. Song · Cao Xun's poem Jiang Shenzi / Jiang Chengzi
Ten rains and five winds
injure the public interest to benefit one 's private interest - sǔn gōng féi sī
make the old and new contrast and complement each other - xiāng dé yì zhāng
severity in speech and fairness in principle -- as the utterance of an upright person - cí yán yì zhèng