Wandering idioms?

(1) What are the words used to describe drifting?

The words for vagrancy are as follows

Wandering from one place to another [diān pèi liú lí] Interpretation: Degeneration is a metaphor for poverty and frustration; Displacement: waves fall. Because of famine and war, the flow is scattered. Describe life is hard, wandering around.

After all, his wandering life left nothing behind.

Wandering around [liú làng] Interpretation Life has no landing, wandering around.

I am the most beautiful lover in the world.

Wandering abroad [LiúLuo] Interpretation of poverty and frustration, wandering outside.

I feel very tired when I wander around making sentences.

The explanation of the displacement [liú sàn] cycle is separated.

Displaced people, do you miss home?

[piāo péng] Explain the canopy that flutters with the wind, which is a metaphor for people who have been drifting for more than three years, looking back at the liver and lungs with fever.

I am used to making my own sentences.

(2) Idioms describing vagrancy.

Unbound boat: A boat that is not tied with a rope. Metaphor is a wandering life. It is also a metaphor for an unrestrained body.

Wander around: Things wander around. It also means life is unstable.

Drifting from east to west: apprentice: mobile apprentice. Wandering around, walking around. Metaphor life is unstable, running around.

Drifting east and drifting west: refers to drifting around with no definite destination.

Moving from east to west: refers to moving around and drifting.

Duckweed: It's a metaphor for drifting.

Duckweed: a metaphor for drifting. Same as "duckweed"

Pan-ping floating stalk: Ping grass and roots floating on the water. Metaphor trail is erratic.

Feng Ping's Roaming: A Metaphor of Roaming.

Floating grassland: Wandering around in the countryside of Shan Ye.

Floating house: Pan: floating; House: residence. Describe taking a boat as your home, living on the water and drifting.

Drifting of stems and duckweeds: Broken stems and duckweeds float in the water. Metaphor goes with the flow.

Dried duckweed floating: Dried duckweed floating in water. Metaphor goes with the flow.

The stem is floating: a metaphor of drift. Stem, broken stem; Peng,.

Blackbird: A bird with a narrow bill and long tail and wings. As long as one of them is out of the group, the others will sing and look for the same kind. Metaphor a brother wandering in a different place, in urgent need of help.

Come to Hong and go to Yan: a metaphor for wandering people.

Wandering in the Jianghu: wandering around; Jianghu: refers to all places. Wandering around, living without a fixed place.

Wandering: wandering: wandering around; Pingji: Like duckweed, floating. Describe the trail drifting, just like duckweed.

Wandering: wandering: forced by life, staying in another country; Dust: refers to a troubled life. Down and out, wandering the rivers and lakes.

Wandering in rivers and lakes: describe being poor and wandering in a foreign land.

Exile: Forced to leave home and wander abroad.

Tianya: Tianya: Tianya, refers to a very far place. Down and out, wandering around. Describe life as unstable and extremely difficult.

Drift: Forced to leave home and wander abroad.

Luan Pu Feng Bo: ① Describe the magical and elegant brushwork of calligraphy. (2) metaphor husband and wife or lovers live apart. It also refers to the decline of life experience and drifting with the flow. Also known as "storm Luan Piao" and "Piaoluan Piao Feng".

Falling and breaking: Falling and falling are like a loose grass flying in the wind, and the migration is impermanent.

Drifting broken stems: floating grasses and plants that drift with the current have broken stems. Metaphor life is unstable, wandering everywhere.

Falling and breaking: falling and falling, flying like grass with the wind, becoming impermanent.

Broken stems: floating grass and broken branches that drift with the tide. Metaphor is wandering around, with no definite destination.

Drift: refers to flowers, leaves, etc. Withered and shed. Metaphor people wandering.

Gone with the wind: gone with the wind: Bo: Wandering. There are floating marks and wandering footprints everywhere. Describe the trail drifting, just like duckweed.

Duckweed follows Shui Piao, and grass flies with the wind. Metaphor is a wandering life.

Accidental encounter: duckweed drifts with the current, and it is uncertain to gather and disperse. Metaphor is the accidental meeting of people.

Meet by chance: duckweed drifts with the current, and it is uncertain to gather and disperse. It's a metaphor for someone you've never met.

Meet by chance: duckweed drifts with the current, and it is uncertain to gather and disperse. Metaphor is the accidental meeting of people.

Wandering: like duckweed, like waves. Metaphor is wandering everywhere, living without a fixed place.

The shadow of the waves: like duckweed and waves, there is nowhere to stay. Metaphor is wandering around, with no definite trace.

Wandering: like duckweed, like waves. Metaphor is wandering everywhere, living without a fixed place.

Divergence: Divergence: Different. Wandering, living without a fixed place.

(3) Idioms describing people who are wandering outside.

Trekking mountains and rivers, describing the pain of traveling far away. See "wading through mountains and rivers".

Source: "Twenty-eight years of Zuo Zhuan's" xianggong ":"I will abandon your monarch and seal it, and I will travel across mountains and rivers and suffer from first frost to show my heart. "

Sleeping in the wind. Describe the hardships of traveling or field work.

Source: Shi Shi's poem "Send a three-year-old son to the cloud first": "Lu Su's style rice is 600 miles, and the Ming Dynasty drinks Ma Nanjiang water."

Eating the wind and swallowing the dew describes the hardships of traveling or living in the wild.

Source: Qing Xuanding's "Night Rain in Qiu Guang": "Eating the wind and dew, trekking everywhere."

Walking through the frost describes not being afraid of the cold and running around.

Source: Jin's "Bao Puzi Xu Xue": "So I have to go through the wind and rain, wear frost and walk on the ice, hold white with yellow arms, clear fat to approach evil ways, plan to plant early and get late!"

Wandering from one place to another: falling is a metaphor of poverty and frustration; Displacement: waves fall. Because of famine or war, the flow is scattered. Describe life is hard, wandering around.

Source: The Book of Songs: "People also have words and sometimes reveal them." Han Xue Guangde Biography: "I see that Kanto is extremely sleepy and the people are displaced."

Be displaced by famine or war. Describe life is hard, wandering around. With "drift from place to place".

Source: Meng De's Story of the Summer Volume: "In winter, Jin She left Jiangxi, the residents went to the city and the servants were displaced."

Running around. More refers to being forced by life, or running around for some purpose.

Source: Chu's "Qin Yuanchun Farewell Zhang": "I have served for many years and have a wide range of friends. I ran here and there, and the water came to the mountain to pick me up. "

Running around. More refers to being forced by life, or running around for some purpose.

Source: Chu's "Qin Yuanchun Farewell Zhang": "I have served for many years and have a wide range of friends. I ran here and there, and the water came to the mountain to pick me up. "

Floating east and west means drifting around, with no definite destination.

(4) What are the idioms of drift?

What are the idioms of characters floating and sinking: many people floating and sinking on the mountain, blood floating and sinking, beauty floating and sinking, version floating and sinking, mother floating and sinking in the rice, floating and sinking things, drifting with the tide, infinite floating and sinking, earthworms crossing the embankment, floating and sinking the city, floating and sinking in the west, drifting, floating and sinking the wind and rain, floating and sinking the mother, and boating with blood.

5] Idioms about vagrancy or something.

Traveling everywhere, life is unstable.

Pi Aubois Ding

[Interpretation]

Drift: To drift or drift. Shui Piao stops wherever it goes, and there is no certain direction.

Metaphor is running for a living, and life is unstable.

[6] What are the idioms that describe life wandering?

An idiom to describe wandering in life: living without a fixed place and relying on others.

Idioms with the word "no":

Hold your horses, hold your horses, love your blog and be proud of your feelings.

The saddle will never leave the horse's back, A will never leave the saddle, and A will never forget the danger of not leaving the body.

Sad but not hurt, ambiguous, arrogant and rude, unable to resist the darkness.

If you don't obey the monarch and the minister, you will be uncomfortable and supercilious.

Modesty is never a good idea. If you have to, you must avoid the axe.

No axe, no whip.

Do not scratch the north, be unfaithful, tread, avoid fire and water, and distinguish husked wheat.

Don't argue about shelled wheat, shelled millet, water and soil are inconvenient, and soup and fire are inevitable.

One hundred is not too many, and one is not too few soldiers. There is no pollution, no blood, no snow, and no defeat.

Everything does not exist, and everything does not exist.

Once in a blue moon, soldiers are disloyal, humble and invincible.

Don't tell the truth, don't be white, don't pull it out, don't coexist, don't look, don't ignore it.

Don't worry, don't pull, don't ignore it, you can't control it.

The sword is not afraid, the dust is not afraid, and the whip is not long.

I am not stupid, deaf, semi-educated, unwilling to leave without saying goodbye, and not bad.

No hard feelings, no pain, no mistakes, no pain, no pain, no pain.

As expected, the three tiles are not bad, and the top and bottom are not decent.

Don't be ashamed to ask questions and despise others. If you don't eat mutton, you will get angry all over. If you don't eat fireworks, you will be ashamed.

Unfortunately, misfortune is not the second time to move, nor is it the second time for an unpretentious person to be unfaithful.

Fear of accidents, the crime of accidents, half understanding, half low, half not high.

What uncertain idioms have you floated?

rove

Pinyin: pi ā o b ó b ù d ù ng

Explanation: Metaphorically, there is no fixed place and occupation, life is not fixed, and you are running around.

Synonym: drifting

Antonym: live and work in peace and contentment

Sentence-making: Since then, the Elk has ended its wandering overseas for more than half a century and started a new life of returning to its native land and nature. -Lesson 17 "Elk", the first volume of sixth grade Chinese in Jiangsu Education Edition

(8) Idioms describing wandering outside.

The stem floats with the duckweed: gěng fàn píng piāo, and the duckweed floats with its stem broken. Metaphor goes with the flow. As predicate and attribute; Metaphor is wandering.

Drifting is uncertain: pi ā o b ó w ú d, drifting: drifting or drifting. Shui Piao stops wherever it goes, and there is no certain direction. Metaphor is running for a living, and life is unstable. As predicate and attribute; Used in life.

Ping Piao Peng Chuan: píng piāo péng zhàn, like duckweed floating with water, like grass flying with the wind. Metaphor is a wandering life. As predicate and attribute; Metaphor is a wandering life.

Wandering: piāo bójοolǐ, drifting: drifting or berthing; Travel: To visit another country. Metaphor is wandering in a foreign land, without a fixed home.

The storm is drifting: the storm is drifting, drifting, drifting: drifting with the tide. Calligraphy originally described elegance and elegance, and later it was compared to the separation of husband and wife or the frustration of literati. As objects and attributes; Used of a mobile person.

Falling and breaking: piāo líng péng àn, falling and falling like a loose grass, flying with the wind, and the migration is impermanent. As predicate and attribute; Of unstable life.

Broken stem: piāo péng àn gěng, floating grass with the current. Metaphor is wandering around, with no definite destination. As predicate and complement; Metaphor life is unstable, wandering everywhere.

Drifting of stems and duckweeds: gěng fàn píng piāo, broken stems and duckweeds floating in the water. Metaphor goes with the flow.

Wandering around: dōng piāo xī dàng dà ng dō ng, things are different. It also means life is unstable.

Broken stems of floating awnings: piāo péng àn gěng, broken stems of floating awnings and plants drifting with the flow. Metaphor life is unstable, wandering everywhere.

Divergence: qí chí rí, disambiguation: different. Wandering, living without a fixed place. As an attribute or adverbial; Used for drifting.

Wandering: Pí ng z not ng l à ng j ì, like duckweed, like waves. Metaphor is wandering everywhere, living without a fixed place. As predicate, attribute and object; There is no clear whereabouts.

Levies similar words about drifting.

Trekking mountains and rivers, describing the pain of traveling far away. See "wading through mountains and rivers".

Source: "Twenty-eight years of Zuo Zhuan's" xianggong ":"I will abandon your monarch and seal it, and I will travel across mountains and rivers and suffer from first frost to show my heart. "

Sleeping in the wind. Describe the hardships of traveling or field work.

Source: Shi Shi's poem "Send a three-year-old son to the cloud first": "Lu Su's style rice is 600 miles, and the Ming Dynasty drinks Ma Nanjiang water."

Eating the wind and swallowing the dew describes the hardships of traveling or living in the wild.

Source: Qing Xuanding's "Night Rain in Qiu Guang": "Eating the wind and dew, trekking everywhere."

Walking through the frost describes not being afraid of the cold and running around.

Source: Jin's "Bao Puzi Xu Xue": "So I have to go through the wind and rain, wear frost and walk on the ice, hold white with yellow arms, clear fat to approach evil ways, plan to plant early and get late!"

Wandering from one place to another: falling is a metaphor of poverty and frustration; Displacement: waves fall. Because of famine or war, the flow is scattered. Describe life is hard, wandering around.

Source: The Book of Songs: "People also have words and sometimes reveal them." Han Xue Guangde Biography: "I see that Kanto is extremely sleepy and the people are displaced."

Be displaced by famine or war. Describe life is hard, wandering around. With "drift from place to place".

Source: Meng De's Story of the Summer Volume: "In winter, Jin She left Jiangxi, the residents went to the city and the servants were displaced."

Running around. More refers to being forced by life, or running around for some purpose.

Source: Chu's "Qin Yuanchun Farewell Zhang": "I have served for many years and have a wide range of friends. I ran here and there, and the water came to the mountain to pick me up. "

Running around. More refers to being forced by life, or running around for some purpose.

Source: Chu's "Qin Yuanchun Farewell Zhang": "I have served for many years and have a wide range of friends. I ran here and there, and the water came to the mountain to pick me up. "

Floating east and west means drifting around, with no definite destination.

Source: The first and second chapters of Dangkou Zhi: "The coachman said,' Only one person thinks he should be beaten.' Xu Huai listened and asked who it was. The driver said,' This man's name is Yan, and his name is Shu De ... He has been wandering all over the world, and I don't know where he lives. "

Wandering around means wandering around.

Source: The fourth time of "Wild Sou Exposed Words": "If my sister doesn't feel pity, how can I stay calm after my sister's death?"

Duckweed is a metaphor for wandering.

Source: Guan's poem "Farewell to Jia Yun's Old Age": "Life is a hundred years old, duckweed is temporarily blind."

Duckweed floating with broken stems is a metaphor for drifting. Same as "duckweed"

Source: Ming Ding Mei-Left "Yu He Zhu Ji Fa": "If you want to return to the sea, the ship is not long, and dreams and winds will be like a broken stalk. Who can tie it? "

Plants and roots floating on the water. Metaphor trail is erratic.

Source: Don Xu Yin's "Farewell" poem: "When the wine is exhausted, it is sad."

Sleeping in the wind. Describe the hardships of traveling or field work.

Source: Shi Shi's poem "Send a three-year-old son to the cloud first": "Lu Su's style rice is 600 miles, and the Ming Dynasty drinks Ma Nanjiang water."

Travel-stained: refers to travel, meaning hard work; Servant: You look tired on the road. Describe the journey, busy and tired.

Source: Yuan Shang Zhongxian's Liu Yichuan: "You are an old friend from afar."

Feng Yu 'an describes women's hard work and messy hair.

Source: Wei Chao's Liu Yichuan in Tang Dynasty: "I can't bear to see the king's beloved daughter herding sheep in the wild."

Wind comb, rain comb: combs, combs and other devices for combing hair; Bath: Take a bath and wash. The wind combs your hair and the rain washes it. Describe running around, working hard and complaining, and the wind and rain keep going.

Source: Yuan Shi Li Le: "Like ancestors, wind and combing rain."

A storm is a metaphor for a talented person who is frustrated and wandering.

Source: qingquan Wang Zu's "Preface to (Welcome to Mountain Residence Poetry)": "However, the phoenix is floating, and the arms are full of thorns."

Floating houses are extensive: floating; House: residence. Describe taking a boat as your home, living on the water and drifting.

Source: "New Tang Book Zhang Chuan": "I am willing to stay for the floating family and go back and forth."

Floating: floating; Bo: Wandering. There are floating marks and wandering footprints everywhere. Metaphor is a wandering person or life.

Source: Wang Yuan Ziyi's "Wrong Entry into Taoyuan" is the third fold: "It seems that you have slapped us and dared to bully us."

The stem was broken by floating duckweed, which floated in the water. Metaphor goes with the flow.

Source: Yuan's "Luo" is the second fold: "Only wait for him to go to the stalk and float on the plate, and the third son's dream is broken."

The stem was broken by floating duckweed, which floated in the water. Metaphor goes with the flow.

Source: The second fold of Yuan's "Luo": "Only when he goes to stalk and floats alone in the clouds, my third son's dream will be exhausted."

Drifting is a metaphor for drifting. Stem, broken stem; Peng,.

Source: Fan Ming benefited from the "Looking for Relatives": "The stalks are floating, and the mountains and rivers are not afraid to work."

Lai Hong Qu Yan is a metaphor for a wandering person.

Source: Huang Qingshi's "Childhood Return to Xin 'an to Send Here": "Come to Hong and go to Ganlu along the Yangtze River, sleep in the wind and fly in the morning and evening. "

Wandering in the Jianghu: wandering around; Jianghu: refers to all places. Wandering around, living without a fixed place.

Source: Zhang Song Fang Jun's "Cloud Seven Signs" Volume 1 13: "Someone can't be content with hardships and wander the rivers and lakes."

Wandering: wandering around; Pingji: Like duckweed, floating. Describe the trail drifting, just like duckweed.

Source: The Peony Pavilion by Tang Xianzu in the Ming Dynasty, the 20th time: "Hate it to the marrow, wind cuts jade hibiscus."

Travel around the world: wandering around. Wandering around, footprints all over the world.

Source: Song Lixun's "Wild Guest Series Li Bai Tells Tales of Different People": "Being slandered in the same column, the imperial edict will return to the mountains, and then travel around the world."

Travel around the world: wandering around. Wandering around, footprints all over the world.

Source: Song Lixun's "Wild Guest Series Li Bai Tells Tales of Different People": "Being slandered in the same column, the imperial edict will return to the mountains, and then travel around the world."

Wandering describes life as hard and wandering around. Use "diaspora".

Diaspora was dispersed by famine or war. Describe life is hard, wandering around.

Source: The Book of Songs: "People also have words and sometimes reveal them." Han Xue Guangde Biography: "I see that Kanto is extremely sleepy and the people are displaced."

Wandering describes life as hard and wandering around. Use "diaspora".

Displacement: conversion and dispersion. Nowhere to live, wandering around.

Source: biography of Xue Guangde in Han Dynasty: "I saw that Kanto was extremely sleepy and the people were displaced."

Wandering around: forced by life to stay in the field; Dust: refers to a troubled life. Down and out, wandering the rivers and lakes.

Source: Fan Yuan Zi 'an's "Bamboo Leaf Boat" Wedge: "Ten years of cold window study hard as a firefly window, ashamed of not killing Wan XX, so live in the dust."

Wandering in rivers and lakes, describing poverty and wandering in a foreign land.

Forced to leave their homes and wander abroad.

Source: Songshi Puji's "Five Lights Meeting Yuan" Volume 56: "I ran away from my father, bumping into the east and the west, suffering, Amitabha."

Travel around the world: the horizon refers to a far place. Down and out, wandering around. Describe life as unstable and extremely difficult.

Source: Song Deyou's "Zhu Yingtai nearby": "Sigh and block! If you hate wandering around the world, who will cry and travel alone? "

Displacement is more like displacement. Refers to living without a fixed place and wandering around.

Luan Pufeng Bo (1) described calligraphy as magical and elegant. (2) metaphor husband and wife or lovers live apart. It also refers to the decline of life experience and drifting with the flow. Also known as "storm Luan Piao" and "Piaoluan Piao Feng".

Down and out: Down and out. Be driven by life to wander around.

Source: Tang Dumu's "Farewell" poem: "Down and out, rivers and lakes carry wine, and the waist is thin and the palm is light."

Comb your hair in the rain and hurricane, and wash your hair in the rain. Describe people who often work hard outside and have no shelter from the wind and rain.

Source: "Zhuangzi Tianxia": "The rain is very heavy and the wind is urgent."

Dai Yue wears the stars and the moon. It's hard to describe running around all night or going out early and coming back late.

Source: Yuan Anonymous "Enemies and Creditors" Article 1: "This big boy wears a star Dai Yue and gets up early and goes to bed late."

Drift: To drift or drift. Shui Piao stops wherever it goes, and there is no certain direction. Metaphor is running for a living, and life is unstable.

Source: Song Fan Chengda's "Yuan Qun Cong": "Pity my good brother and wander in Jiangcun."

Wandering and drifting, like loose grass, flying with the wind, the migration is impermanent.

Broken stems are a metaphor for unstable life and wandering around.

Drifting and drifting: drift with the tide; Stay, stay for a while. Metaphor is running around, life is unstable.

Source: Song Fan Chengda's "Yuan Qun Cong": "Pity my good brother and wander in Jiangcun."

In ancient times, it was said that literati carried books and swords and traveled everywhere.

Floating grass with broken stems and branches drifts with the tide. Metaphor is wandering around, with no definite destination.

Source: Song's "Dragon Map Searching for a Boat": "The whole family has hundreds of fingers, such as floating roofs and broken stems, one in the horizon and one in the corner."

Broken stems of floating duckweeds and plants. Metaphor is an uncertain life experience.

Piaoping wanders: Piaoping; Bo: Wandering. There are floating marks and wandering footprints everywhere. Describe the trail drifting, just like duckweed.

Source: Ming Lingmengchu's Surprise at the Second Moment 1 1: "I am very lucky. Your father felt at home at first sight. I am so grateful."

Duckweed floats with the water like duckweed and flies with the wind like grass. Metaphor is a wandering life.

Source: Yun Yuewei Caotang Notes, followed by Luanyang Record 5: "Although the gold is exhausted, shame is returned to the village, and it is common for those who cannot ask."

Meet by chance, go with the flow, gather and disperse. It's a metaphor for someone you've never met.

Source: Tang Wang Bo's Preface to Wang Tengting: "Meet by chance, they are all foreign guests."

Wandering like duckweed and waves. Metaphor is wandering everywhere, living without a fixed place.

Source: The Peony Pavilion by Tang Xianzu in the Ming Dynasty, the 20th time: "Hate it to the marrow, wind cuts jade hibiscus."

The servants were covered in dust: they looked exhausted on the road; Dust: refers to travel, which means hard work. Describe a busy journey and a tiring journey.

Source: Yuan Shang Zhongxian's Liu Yichuan: "You are an old friend from afar." Qing Wu Ren Jian's "History of Pain" goes back to the eighth time: "The three of them chose an inn to stay in, and they traveled all the way. At this point, they can't help but rest early. "

The wind and rain stopped in the wind and rain. Describe hard work.

Habitat: Busy and restless. Mayfly: a hurried and uneasy look. Busy and restless, running around. Also known as "habitat panic".

Piano sword fall: a musical instrument; Sword: weapon; Drift: drift; Zero: Lonely zero. Refers to the literati down and out frustrated, inflation everywhere.

Source: Ye's "Gift to Zhou Qifeng": "When the piano sword falls to the west and returns to the east, when the old tour is happy."

Walking in the frost and staying in the grass means walking in the frost and staying in the grass. Describe hard work.

The flow of flowers (1) metaphor drift or trace impermanence. (2) metaphor over time.

Water boarding, water accommodation, picnic in the breeze. Describe the hardships of the journey.

Wandering around the world: refers to all parts of the country. Degeneration: metaphor for misfortune, loss of dependence, and unstable life. Wandering around, having no life.

Source: Ming Luo Guan Zhong's Romance of the Three Kingdoms, the 28th time: "The clouds are congenial, lest Yuan Shao get angry. All the seas are falling, and there is no fixed place to live. I have been here before, and I happened to meet Pei Yuan Shao coming down the mountain to lead my horse. Yun killed him and took this opportunity to settle down. "

Pentium with the wind; Disturbed. (2) Jude words follow the crowd.

Swallowing the wind and drinking the rain is still a word of mouth. Describe running around and living a hard life.

Lying in the snow and frost is a metaphor for a hard and wandering life.

Go at night and stay at dawn: dawn. Get up early and hurry in the morning, and stay at night. Describe the hardships of traveling.

Source: Yuan's "Chu" is the first fold: "I hope that you will have no scruples at night."

Drinking dew and eating wind is drinking dew and eating wind. Describe an extraordinary life. Also known as "drinking wind and eating dew".

Yuxian county, birds fly fish fishing, birds fly. Metaphor or subject to people, or wandering, the situation is very dangerous. County, through "hanging".

Being caught in the rain describes running around, hard work and unstable life.

Source: Liu Song Zhai Shi Shi Weng Mu: "People don't care about others' return, and people will grow old after the storm."

Eating in the rain and wind means eating at the tuyere and staying in the rain. Describe the vagaries of life

Source: Song Fan Chengda's "Dongyi Poetry Asiming who has lived in Yueshi for a long time": "I wish Rong Feng twice in spring, and the rain will leave the wind to eat the old sick body. Don't laugh at the five lakes, there are still people who have not returned by the sea. "

Eat in the rain and stay in the rain. Describe the vagaries of life

Source: Tang Du Fu's poem "In the Boat": "The wind eats the willow, and the rain lies next to the post building."

Hurricane rain comb: comb your hair; Mu: Wash your hair. The wind combs your hair and the rain washes your hair. Describe people who often work hard outside regardless of the wind and rain.

Source: "Zhuangzi Tianxia": "The rain is very heavy and the wind is urgent."

Comb wind, rain wind, comb hair, rain shampoo. Describe hard work. Just like Hurricane and Rain.

Source: Chen Qing Kang Qi's Biography of Lang Qian, Volume 1: "The princes of Afghanistan are prosperous, honest and simple, and they have repeatedly destroyed the bandits and have always been arrogant."

Comb your hair and wash your hair in the rain. Describe hard work. Just like Hurricane and Rain.

Source: Shen Yi's book "The History of Xuanzong of the Old Tang Dynasty" in the late Jin Dynasty: "The soldiers are exposed to wind and rain, and the suburbs are covered with thorns, while the night in Diao Dou is severe, and the wolf chases through the dome."

Comb frost dew and cover it with frost. Describe hard work.

Source: Yu Xiang Xiang: "There are many things, and I hope it will be smooth sailing."