Idioms that begin with the word stone have good meanings: the stone is shocking, the stone is broken and the sea is dried up, the stone is red and cannot be taken away.
1. Earth-shattering
The original description is that the sound of the harp is sometimes high-pitched, sometimes low, unexpected, and has an indescribable wonder. The discussion in the post-paragraph article is novel and surprising.
Shi Potian Jing Sentences
1. When Chen Jitai was hit by them like that, it was as if the thunder shook suddenly, and the earth was shocked. He was so frightened that his heart collapsed and his soul left his body.
2. He is usually taciturn, but his earth-shattering words are shocking.
3. The construction project of the cross-highway is really an earth-shattering feat.
4. His research often yields earth-shattering discoveries, shocking everyone.
2. The stone rots and the sea dries up
It means until the stone turns to earth and the sea dries up. A metaphor for eternity.
The stone is rotten and the sea is drying up in a sentence
1. I want to be like one of the five lakes and escape together, but I am enveloped by the evil spirit, and the distance is endless. I also say that the stone is rotten and the sea is drying, but the love will not fade away.
2. Three thousand years ago, you were awake, you were lurking underground, I was waiting in the world, you were spinning your silk to make yourself a cocoon, I was looking forward to being lonely, letting the sea change into mulberry fields, the rocks rotting and the sea drying up, it was a dream. Three thousand years, only the oath will never change.
3. The red color of the stone cannot be taken away
The color of the cinnabar is bright red and cannot be changed. A metaphor for a firm will.
Sentences for "the red stone will not be taken away"
1. The stone is red and will not be taken away.
2. His desire to become a calligrapher is clear.