Four-character idioms for wind, rain, and rain:
1. Good weather, wind and rain, wind, frost, rain and snow.
2. The wind is blowing and the rain is blowing.
Four-character idioms for "what wind or rain":
1. The spring breeze turns into rain, the spring breeze turns into rain, the stormy rain, the salty wind and egg rain.
2. Gentle wind and drizzle, violent storm, spring breeze and summer rain, strong storm.
3. There are violent storms, winds and rains, five winds and ten rains, and the wind and rain are the same.
4. There are miserable winds and bitter rains, ups and downs, bloody storms, and friendly winds and rains.
5. Rain comes before the wind, rain comes before the wind, slanting wind and drizzle, miserable wind and cold rain.
6. Strong winds and showers, strong winds and showers, European winds and beautiful rains, and east winds and rains. Characteristics of four-character idioms
From the perspective of Chinese grammar, Chinese idioms are equivalent to a phrase in a sentence. Because a phrase can serve as different components in a sentence, the grammatical functions of idioms also have diverse sex. Chinese idioms have various forms. As mentioned above, there are four-character idioms, five-character idioms, six-character idioms, seven-character idioms, eight-character idioms, etc. Among them, four-character idioms are the main form of Chinese idioms.
The components and structural forms of idioms are fixed and generally cannot be changed or added or deleted at will. In addition, the word order in idioms is also fixed and cannot be changed at will. An idiom is holistic in meaning, and its meaning is often not a simple sum of the meanings of its constituent components, but an overall meaning further summarized on the basis of the meanings of its constituent components.