Rain and wind
Rain and wind, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǔ ch á NF ē ngzh ò u, which means that wind and rain break each other. It comes from the poem "Pink Butterfly · falling flowers in the Fu of Jin ministers".
The origin of Idioms
Xin Qiji, Song Dynasty, wrote the poem "Pink Butterfly · He Jin Chen Fu Luo Hua:" yesterday's spring was like spring, thirteen daughters learned to embroider. A branch, not teach flower thin. Very merciless, it was raining and the wind was blowing. To the garden, shop for lichen red crepe
Analysis of Idioms
Rain and wind
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Rain and wind
Orange turns into trifoliate orange - jú huà wéi zhǐ
the writer 's sincerity shines through his words - qíng xiàn hū cí