1, blustery is an idiom, pronounced as fēng qǐ yún yǒng, to describe the majestic; It also means that things are developing rapidly and with great momentum.
Source: Qing Pu Songling's "Strange Stories from a Lonely Studio, Prefaces and Postscripts to Books, Tang Mengxu": "Liuxian Shop is young and clever, and it is extraordinary. It is written like a storm and can be recorded."
2. One thousand Aliri days is an idiom, pronounced as y and Riqi ā n lǐ, which means that horses run very fast and can run one thousand Aliri days. The latter metaphor refers to the rapid progress of things and the rapid development of science and technology
Origin: Zou Taofen's The Suffering of Progressive Culture is extremely developed due to the hard work of the responsible cadres. In less than a year, there have been more than 50 branches in China.
3. Fast change, pronounced as shn x and wà n bià n, which means fast change and many changes in a very short time.
Source: Liao Zhongkai's Letter to Chiang Kai-shek (V): "Reporting current events is changing rapidly, especially the military situation. If you don't touch the news from all directions day and night, you may not be able to improvise. "
4. by leaps and bounds. Pronunciation is t ū f ē i m ě ng j ě n, which describes rapid development and great changes.
Source: Zou Taofen's "Survival in Adversity" Chapter 3: "The rapid development of progressive culture is beneficial to the nation and the people, but it is a great obstacle to the die-hards and reactionaries."
5. Changing with each passing day is an idiom. Its pronunciation is r? x ? n yuè y ?, which means it is updated every day and changes every month. Refers to the rapid development or progress, the emergence of new things, new atmosphere.
Origin: The Painful History: The Original Narrative by Professor Qing Wu Ren Jian is changing with each passing day, as are the books of French powers and education departments.