flee far away in getting wind of sth.
Wen fengyuanyang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w é NF ē ngyu ǎ NY á ng, which means to run away when you hear a little wind. It comes from Ming Dynasty's Feng Menglong's ancient and modern novels: Mu Mian an and Zheng Huchen's revenge.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty wrote in the ancient and modern novels: Mu Mian'an, Zheng Huchen's Revenge: "Jia Sidao found out that Mongolia had something to do with returning to the north, and Ezhou was surrounded and liberated, so he concealed the negotiation of peace and the acceptance of coins, which shows his exaggeration. It's only said that Mongolia has its own reputation and is far away from the world. "
Idiom usage
To act as a predicate, attribute, or object
Examples
When there is trouble in the financial market, only one is high. The sixty fifth chapter of the light on the wrong road by Li Lvyuan in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Near synonym: Wen fengyuandun
flee far away in getting wind of sth.
a vast territory with a sparse population - dì kuàng rén xī
people without sorrow and anxiety - xī huáng shàng rén
let one 's personal interest affect the whole - yǐ sī hài gōng
be perfectly open in all one 's actions - guāng míng lěi luò