Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - What does this idiom mean?
What does this idiom mean?
Pinyin: Qing tiān p and l √.
Explanation: thunderbolt: thunder. It thundered on a sunny day. A metaphor for an unexpected and shocking event that suddenly happened.
Source: Song Poetry "Chickens don't crow for four nights": "Let Weng fall ill and suddenly get drunk. Just like for a long time, the sky is flying. "
For example, the sudden news of this letter was a bolt from the blue, and everyone was shocked. ★ The seventeenth time of Zeng Qingpu's "Evil Sea Flower".
Pinyin code: qtpl
Synonym: misfortune fell from the sky and came as a bolt from the blue.
Antonym: ordinary
Lantern riddle: the most abnormal weather
Usage: as subject, object and attribute; The commanders were shocked.
English: a bolt from the blue
- Previous article:Should children be enlightened?
- Next article:Essay about natural disasters
- Related articles
- Ark instructions introduction
- What should I pay attention to when I go to North Carolina?
- What is My Neighbor Totoro based on?
- Marine weather forecast in Beihai city
- Is it dangerous to be a sailor?
- What is the function of three-point water in Gree air conditioning?
- 165438+ 10 month 10 Xi An Traffic Police issued a notice on continuing to implement traffic management measures to limit the number of motor vehicles on weekdays.
- There is a large range of rain and snow in Hubei, with a wide range of intensity. What preparations should citizens make?
- What are the good places for outdoor barbecue in Nanjing? What barbecue parks do you recommend?
- Can the car drive when the tc diagonal line is bright?