Before the wind comes the rain
The Chinese idiom w è if ē ngxi ā NY ǔ means to draw a conclusion without facts. It's from xingshihengyan.
The origin of Idioms
Ming Dynasty Feng Menglong's "xingshihengyan" Volume 35: "what does the mother-in-law family know? Just talk nonsense! I don't know how to do business. I want you to be the first to break things. "
Idiom usage
It is often used in oral English.
Before the wind comes the rain
talent unsurpassed in one 's generation - gài shì zhī cái
Without skin, how can hair be attached - pí zhī bù cún,máo jiāng yān fù
nourish the living and bury the dead -- do one 's duty - sòng wǎng shì jū