Hail and frost
Hail and frost, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǔ Nb á of ē ishu ā ng, which means to be wronged and framed. It comes from Wang Chong's Lun Heng Gan Xu in Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
It refers to the disaster. It refers to the case that the minister knows the injustice, and the meaning of the case is exciting. If you read hail and frost, you can be bright.
The origin of Idioms
In Wang Chong's Lun Heng Gan Xu of Han Dynasty, "Zou Yan is innocent. He is confined to Yan. In May of summer, he looks up to the sky and sighs. The sky is meteorite frost."
Idiom explanation
Refers to being wronged and framed.
Hail and frost
Pillow the mountain and the sea - zhěn shān jīn hǎi
Every inch of the earth is equal to the sky - cùn dì chǐ tiān
send the army out without a righteous cause - shī chū wú míng