An idiom similar to climbing mountains and mountains.

Smile, look around, the sky is falling, falling apart and dancing.

First, smile.

Vernacular interpretation: describe a happy look.

Dynasty: Yuan

Author: Wang Shifu

Source: The West Chamber Book II, the second fold: "He saw the frightened soul yesterday, but he is smiling today."

Second, look around.

Vernacular interpretation: Look around: He walks slowly, as if looking for something.

Dynasty: Three Kingdoms

Author: Cao Zhi

Source: "Heavy Book Wu Ji": "Look around and call it no one!"

Looking around, it can be said that there are few people.

Third, the sky is falling and the earth is sinking

Interpretation of Vernacular Language: The sky were to fall. Metaphor is a major disaster.

Source: Biography of Heroes of Children 39: "I have this thing, and it is also a lie to say that I have fallen."

Dynasty: Qing dynasty

Author: Wen Kang

Fourth, collapse

A metaphor for the division of things. Like falling apart, broken tiles, out of control. Metaphor is complete collapse.

Source: "Historical Records of the First Qin Emperor": "Qin accumulated and declined, and the world fell apart."

Dynasty: Western Han Dynasty

Author: Sima Guang

The cumulative attenuation of the State of Qin reached an extreme, completely collapsed, and the world was out of control, just like falling apart and broken tiles.

Five, dancing

Interpretation of vernacular: dancing with both hands and jumping with both feet. Describe happiness to the extreme.

Dynasty: Zhou

Author: By many people

Source: preface to the book of songs: "I don't know how to dance with my hands, but I can dance with my feet."

I'm glad to know that my hands are dancing and my feet are jumping.