Idioms describing scenes and momentum

Magnificent, unstoppable, earth-shaking, magnificent, earth-shaking

I. Magnificence

Explanation: majestic: vast and boundless. Describe the majestic.

From: Wen Song Tianxiang's Wenshan Collection, Introduction Postscript, Song Zhengqi Volume 14: "Its majestic; It will last forever. "

Example: Qin Mu's "Dawn in the Ancient Battlefield": "This is a magnificent page in the modern history of China."

Second, avalanches [pá i sh ā n d m: o h m: i]

Explanation: Push the mountain and overturn the sea. Describe strength and momentum.

From: Song Yang Wanli's "June 24th Disease": "At the beginning of the disease, the enemy was quite strong, and it was difficult to overwhelm."

This irresistible trend is irresistible to any diehard forces.

Third, earth-shaking [f ā n ti ā n Defoe]

Explanation: Turn it over. Describe great and radical changes. It also means making a lot of noise.

From: Liu Tang Shang's poem "Tiger Cut Eighteen Beats": "Who knows that it is upside down, and now it looks south at Beidou."

Example: Earth-shaking changes have come.

Fourth, grandeur

Description: The water surface was originally described as vast. Metaphor is grand or huge.

From: Bao Zhao's Book of Landing on the Thunder Shore and Sisters in the Southern Song Dynasty: "The guest is poor and the waves are majestic."

Ex.: Seven-character poems must be magnificent, ups and downs, alert and clear-sighted.

Five, the earth shook.

Explanation: When the earthquake happened, the earth trembled and the mountains and rivers shook. It also describes a huge momentum or fierce struggle.

From: Song Ouyang Xiu's "Ouyang Wenzhong's Public Collection, Recitation Collection, On the Initial Form of Repairing the River": "Fear of shaking the mountains will cause disaster from now on."

Example: China's atomic bomb detonated successfully, only to see a flash of silver light, which shook the world instantly.