Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - The Idiom Meaning and Two-part Allegory in "Stir the River"

The Idiom Meaning and Two-part Allegory in "Stir the River"

The idiom meaning of "turning the tide":

There is a lot of water.

Jiang fān hǎI Jiǎo

[Interpretation] [Explanation] Describe the huge water potential. Metaphor is very powerful or powerful. It also describes making a lot of noise or making a mess.

[Language] [Source] Wu Ming Cheng En The Journey to the West Twenty-third time: "Dragons can spray clouds and warm fog, sow soil and raise sand. There are means to go back from Bashan Mountain, and there are magical powers to cross the river and stir the sea. " Shi Ming Nai 'an's "The Water Margin" is the fourteenth time: "The conductor said that the sky is tempting to cross the river and stir the sea."

The ship was drifting with the wind, and even the boundless fast horse could not catch up with him. It's getting bigger. Really ~, very interesting. ★ Li Qingru's "Mirror Flower Edge" is back to the 39th.