What are the four-word idioms about growth?

The four-word idiom about growth is: weather-beaten, weather-beaten, world-beaten, worry-beaten, weather-beaten.

Frost and snow b m: o j and ng Shu ā ng Xu Wei? Full: full; Jing: Experience; Frost and snow: metaphor of hardship. Describe the hardships and hardships of long-term life and struggle.

Source: Clear sky Ren Shang's "Peach Blossom Fan" Twenty-first time: "The chicken skin is thin, like frost and snow, and the silk temples are like silver."

B: O, j: and ng, Sh, bian refer to many human changes.

Source: Qu Qiubai's Journey to a Hungry Country III: "My cousin used to be a famous beauty in her hometown, but now she has undergone great changes. The pain of family life has swept away the spring like a storm."

Sophisticated B: OJ: and NGSHW-U-U-U-U-U-U-U-U-U-U-U-U-U-U.

Source: Song Luyou's poem "Shu Xing": "I got a lot of money in Xishan, and I am also full of worldly wisdom."

"Juan" means that he has experienced many difficulties and hardships.

Source: Guo Moruo's "Southern Crown Grass", Act II, Scene 1: "Mrs. Sheng Tai, the first mother of Xia Wanchun, is in her fifties and is very old because of suffering."

The weather-beaten b m: o j and ng f ě ng Shu ā ng? Full: full; Jing: Experience; Wind and frost: a metaphor for hardship. Describe the hardships and hardships of long-term life and struggle.

Source: Clear sky Ren Shang's "Peach Blossom Fan" Twenty-first time: "The chicken skin is thin, like snow frost, and the silk temples are like silver."