Idioms describing the changeable weather
Idioms describing the changeable weather include: cold, dark, stormy, pouring rain, strong wind.
1. Return to cold but cold: Pinyin is huí hán dǎo lěng, which means that the weather is hot and cold for a while, and it changes constantly. The description is repeated and changeable.
Source: Chapter 36 of "Qilu Deng" by Li Luyuan of the Qing Dynasty: He was driven out, then called in, and returned to the cold.
2. The pinyin is hūn tiān hēi dì, which means to describe the dark sky and also metaphorically describe the darkness and chaos of society.
Source:
Chapter 8 of "The Scholars" by Wu Jingzi of the Qing Dynasty: Wang Daotai was really in a panic and couldn't choose the way. He drove by dry road for several days and then took a boat to leave. It was dark and dark, and he kept walking. Arrive at Wuzhen, Zhejiang.
Chapter 52 of "A Brief History of Civilization" by Li Boyuan of the Qing Dynasty: After finishing the translation, Rao Hong was so angry that he felt dizzy.
Chapter 95 of "The Strange Current Situation Witnessed in Twenty Years" by Wu Jianren of the Qing Dynasty: If he had some potential, he should come out to organize things; but he is still in the dark, hiding all day long. Messing around in the casino.
3. Storm: The pinyin is bào fēng zhòu yǔ, which means a rapid and violent wind and rain. It is a metaphor for a movement with great momentum and rapid development. It is also called a storm.
Source: Chapter 69 of "Journey to the West" by Wu Chengen of the Ming Dynasty: There were two birds, a male and a female, flying together in the same place, but they were suddenly scattered by a storm.
4. Downpour: The pinyin is qīng pén dà yǔ, which describes the heavy rain.
Source:
"The Meaning of Rain" by Su Shi of the Song Dynasty: Smoke surrounds the mountains, clouds surround the waist, and heavy rain determines the Ming Dynasty.
"White Emperor" by Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty: The clouds in Baidi City came out, and the rain in Baidi City turned the basin upside down.
5. Strong wind: Pinyin is kuáng fēng dà zuò, which means strong wind and describes strong wind.
Source: Chapter 79 of "Water Margin" by Shi Naian of the Ming Dynasty: At the beginning, I walked through the forest and saw the trees, and then I walked through the rocks and flew sand. For a moment, white waves lifted the sky, and suddenly black clouds covered the ground, and the red sun lost its light. , the wind is strong.