shake the world
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi ā NTI ā NJI ē D ì, which means that it can shake the world and describe the great momentum, or the huge and thorough change. It comes from the preface to the collection of poems by Kou Zhongmin.
The origin of Idioms
Song Xinxue's postscript to the collection of poems by Kou Zhongmin said that "the ministers of the two dynasties of laigong made great achievements."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attributive with commendatory meaning. The 28th chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in Ming Dynasty: "if you are a hero, you should pull out a stone like a pill." If you want to be a fine person, you must forge it in the fire. If you want to make great achievements, you must walk on the thin ice. Hong Yingming's Caigen Tan: self cultivation
shake the world
to preserve or to ruin cannot be foretold - cún wáng wèi bǔ
Tongshan collapses in the West and Luozhong responds in the East - tóng shān xī bēnɡ,luò zhōng dōng yìng