water rushes down and covers thousands of miles of land
Yixie Qianli, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī Xi è Qi ā NL ǐ, which means to describe the river running straight down, now refers to the style of writing unrestrained and smooth, also refers to the straight line down, the momentum is very strong. It comes from Li Bai of Tang Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
One day, one fall, one fall
Idiom usage
It's very fast. It's just like a torrent of water, but it's very few. (Wen Ping by Wang Shizhen in Ming Dynasty)
The origin of Idioms
Li Bai of the Tang Dynasty wrote a poem to governor Shi Zhao, who was a follower of his younger brother Xuan: "Changchuan is open to the middle stream, and thousands of miles will flow to wuhui." Chen Liang of Song Dynasty wrote a book with Xin You'an Hall: "the great river, a thousand li."
Chinese PinYin : yī xiè qiān lǐ
water rushes down and covers thousands of miles of land
not for days [ merely ] or for months. bù rì bù yuè
modify the heaven and change the sun. yí tiān yì rì
major issues issues of right and wrong. dà shì dà fēi