Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Idioms describing people's bumpy fate

Idioms describing people's bumpy fate

Idioms describing the ups and downs of people are as follows:

1, bad luck

Bad timing and fate. The philosophy of Lao She's Lao Zhang No.29: Once he called a doctor for a sick woman in the middle of the night, and the doctor made a mistake about the medicine. People blamed Zhao Si ~ As for the medicine that got the famous doctor into trouble, it was wrong!

2. Time is not suitable

Time flies: in the past, fortune tellers called it "luck" for a year; Pro: Geely. Refers to a person who has been in an unfortunate state for many years. This is called bad luck. Feng Ming magnum's "Awakening the World: Du Zichun's Three Visits to Chang 'an": "I think my time is not good, so I didn't enjoy myself, even so. "

3. Endless hardships

All kinds of difficulties and hardships. Zou Taofen's Thousands of Overseas Chinese who are Enthusiastic and Patriotic since the Anti-Japanese War: The money of overseas Chinese is hard-won, which is accumulated by their hard work.

4. weather-beaten

Full: full; Jing: Experience; Wind and frost: a metaphor for hardship. Describe the hardships and hardships of long-term life and struggle. Chapter 1 of Bitter Flowers in Feng Deying: Serious and nervous expressions appear on people's tanned and weather-beaten faces.

5, such as cattle.

Like a cow carrying a student's things. Metaphor life burden is extremely heavy. Mao Zedong's Social Class Analysis of China: "When time is insufficient, ask for mercy from relatives and friends, borrow a few buckets and liters, perfunctory for three days and five days, and debts are like cattle."