groundless talk
Wind and rain, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē NGF ē ngy ǔ y ǔ, meaning continuous wind and rain; metaphor obstacles; also metaphor times turbulence, rumors. It comes from Pu Tian Le Yi Jian Hu.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Zhang Kejiu's "Pu Tian Le · Yi Jian Hu" Song: "wind and rain Qingming, Ying Ying Yan Guan Qing."
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's an object; it's used in people's experience. Example: the romance of the Yangs' house: watching the sky at night after graduation: "it's been a stormy time, nearly a month. Only two days later, Taizu sent troops to fight, and this happened several times. " The poem of Qing Pingle by Nalanxingde in Qing Dynasty: "the deep courtyard of Pingshan in Liuqu is full of ups and downs day by day." Huang Qingyun's "waves": "[Tao Dejiao] has gone through countless ups and downs, so she left quietly." "In the turbulent political tide, comrade Enlai bravely led the patriotic movement of students." People's daily, February 10, 1992: "the hard work of several generations has made this famous publishing house flourish." Ke Fei's "Spring Rush" 26: "if you make a lot of noise and make the dam full of ups and downs, don't you want to make people say strange things to him secretly?"
groundless talk
the buffaloes in jiangsu pant when they see the moon mistaking it for the hot sun - wú niú chuǎn yuè
help others to fulfil good deeds - jiāng shùn qí měi
troubles start inside the house - huò qǐ xiāo qiáng
outlast even the heaven and the earth - tiān lǎo dì huāng
those , on whom one 's livelihood depends - yī shí fù mǔ