Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Idiom story of urban wind and rain

Idiom story of urban wind and rain

Story of the idiom Storm in the City _ Who is the origin and protagonist of the idiom Storm in the City?

Idioms caused a storm in this city.

Pinyin m: nché ngf and ngy

It means that the city is full of wind and rain. The original description of the rain scene before the Double Ninth Festival. After the metaphor, an event was widely spread and there were many discussions around.

Idiom story

Pan Dalin of Huangzhou is good at writing poems and often has good sentences. Xie Wuyi wrote to ask him if he had any poems recently. He wrote back in autumn scenery, and every sentence was a good one. He just wrote a good poem yesterday: "The storm in the city is near Chongyang". Suddenly the renter came, the poem disappeared, only one sentence.

1. What do you mean by "urban storm"? Good or bad?

transfer

Allusions are full of wind and rain, near Chongyang. Song; Pan Dalin's poem "Title Wall"

It means that the city is full of wind and rain. The original description of the rain scene before the Double Ninth Festival. After the metaphor, an event was widely spread and there were many discussions around.

Used as predicate, attribute and adverbial; Used for bad things

Structural subject-predicate

Synonyms are in full swing

On the contrary, the word is peaceful.

Rhyming words are repetitive, emotional, five men and two women, too numerous to mention, full of waste, highly disciplined, obedient and endless, ...

ancient times

Lantern riddles, Qing palace, forbidden area, no sunny days.

English topic London

German zumstadtgesprüchwerden

Japan ぅわさがどこもかしこも?つたわって

French biscuit

During the Northern Song Dynasty, Xie Wuyi in Linchuan, Jiangxi Province and Pan Dalin in Huangzhou, Hubei Province were good friends. They are all poor poets. They often visit each other and exchange views on poetry. One day, Xie Wuyi wrote to ask about Pan's recent poems. Pan Gang writes very well &; The storm in ldquo city is near Chongyang &; Rdquo was interrupted by the urge for rent, so he had to send it in a single sentence, without the following.

Why does the idiom "ten miles and eight townships" make such a big noise? Lu Xun's lace literature; snack

Other uses

◎? The words had already started, and Lihua went on desperately: "You may have heard that Gu made a scene in the reservoir in the province, not to mention that Lao Li was in charge of agriculture, forestry and water conservancy, forcing him to take a stand on your issue.

Those guys. Hellip& amphellip, they always try their best to make such an incident cause an uproar in this city and arouse the views of the world.

As a result, the rumor that the examiner sold joints privately spread like wildfire, which set off a storm in the whole city for a time.

This temptation is strong and cruel. After all, he is over 500 years old. Even in the current society, any scandal between him and China will definitely cause an uproar.

◎? If it weren't for the unexpected meeting of two mistresses, one of them committed suicide by taking sleeping pills (attempted), which caused an uproar in the city, who would have known that this respectable deputy director and pianist was still busy dealing with several mistresses, arranging secret trysts for them, solving problems for them and mediating their disputes! In order to prevent mistresses from reporting their dissatisfaction, he did not hesitate to take all kinds of deception and illegal means to send mistresses abroad or get married.

◎ A word from a gentleman is a promise; When a word is spoken, the city is full of wind and rain.

Part-of-speech symbols: nouns; Time nouns; Positional nouns; Place nouns; Name; Surname; Name; Place names; Name of the institution; Other proper nouns; ? Verb; Conjunctive verbs; A willing verb; Directional verbs; Adjectives; Distinguishing words; Numbers; Quantifier; Adverbs; Pronouns; Preposition; Conjunction; Auxiliary words; Sigh; Onomatopoeic words; Idioms; Abbreviation; Pretreatment components; Subsequent components; ? Morpheme words; Non-morpheme words;