One cloud rains in Mao Mao, and the other one doesn't. Type an idiom.
Von Ewan F. y incarnation
It shows that people are capricious, or used to playing tricks.
The source of Tang Du Fu's Poor Bank of Communications: "There is no need for shuyun to shelter from the rain."
Structural combination.
The usage is derogatory. Use occasions to expose, condemn and criticize people. Generally used as predicate and attribute.
Pronounce repetition; It can't be pronounced "f incarnation"
Shape recognition and covering; Can't write "complicated".
Synonyms are capricious and fickle.
Antonyms are consistent, consistent.
Discrimination between ~ and "willfulness"; It means changeable for a while. But "capriciousness" has a wide scope of application; Can generally refer to doing things, opinions, attitudes, etc. ; ~ refers to people's changeable practices; It is often compared to playing tricks.
Example: there is a kind of person who has two sides and three knives; ~; You must be careful when dealing with such people.
English translation is as changeable as clouds and rain.