different categories of rainfall intensity and wind scales
Five winds and ten rains, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ǔ f ē ngsh í y ǔ, which means once a wind in five days, once a rain in ten days. Good weather. It comes from Lun Heng Shi Ying by Wang Chong of Han Dynasty.
idiom
different categories of rainfall intensity and wind scales
Pinyin
wǔfēngshíyǔ
Citation explanation
It blows once in five days and rains once in ten days. Good weather. In Wang Chong's Lun Heng Shi Ying of the Han Dynasty, "the wind does not sing, the rain does not break, there is a wind in five days, and there is a rain in ten days." Wang Yan of Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Song Dynasty. Song Yuan shuoyou's "you Jiang du Temple uses the rhyme of Wu Long, the ancient Marquis": the ancestral hall is dark, with five winds and ten rains and one incense. Yang Yanzheng of Song Dynasty wrote the poem "water melody Singer: Chengxin Longxing": "if you don't go to seven states and three bases, you'll be five winds and ten rains this year. It's all peacetime." The poem "sending Guangxin prison" written by sadura of Yuan Dynasty: "five winds and ten rain, happy peace, willing to make the world have unjust prison?" Gao Qi of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his Nanzhou Yeren's Zeng lingfu for Wu Yi: "five winds and ten rains should be in harmony, and suddenly he sent an inch of soil to produce Artemisia." .
Analysis of Idioms
Good weather
Idiom usage
Combined; complement, attribute; commendatory
different categories of rainfall intensity and wind scales
perpetrate every conceivable crime and be unpardonably wicked - shí è bù shè