Fall into trouble
In Chinese, Pinyin is "Z ā OQ ī ngy ù Hu", which means to encounter disaster in a dangerous world. It comes from Liu Xiang's "nine sighs, far away" in the songs of Chu.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Xiang's "nine sighs, long gone" in the songs of Chu: "when you are in trouble, you can't be saved. You can't help yourself, but you can't help yourself." Wang Yi's note: "it's impossible to save a person who has suffered from disaster in a dangerous world, so it's impossible to stop crying with a long sigh."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing.
Fall into trouble
in humble station with high talk - wèi bēi yán gāo
despair gives courage to a coward - qín kùn fù chē
assume an air of self-approbation - yáo tóu bǎi nǎo
be accustomed to normal order and live in favourable circumstances - ān cháng chǔ shùn
There is a mirror in the chest - xiōng yǒu xuán jìng