The end of the Dynasty
The Chinese idiom, Xi ā of ù zh ō ngch á o, means hungry all day. It comes from the remnant manuscript of Liu Guiyang Shuo Jing, Sangma dialect in Yishui, written by Liu shunian of the Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Liu shunian of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the remnant manuscript of Liu Guiyang Shuo Jing, Sangma dialect of Yishui: "if one person enters the collection, he will not be able to end the dynasty; if one episode takes a few days, he will not return unarmed."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
The end of the Dynasty
flutter in the wind in the wind - yíng fēng zhāo zhǎn
the hill convulsed and the bell echoed - shān bēng zhōng yìng
use every means to have an innocent person pronounced guilty - shēn wén zhōu nà