Wind and rosy clouds
Feng Sixia, a Chinese idiom, is C ā NF ē ngs ì Xi á in pinyin, which means that the immortals travel everywhere. It comes from the book of fighting with Xiao Wei by Jiesi in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The book of fighting with Xiao Wei written by jiegasi in Yuan Dynasty: "if Gongcheng can lie high on an empty mountain and lead to reverie, he can be the disciples of Chao, Xu, Wu and Juan, Yan Ling and Lu Lian. Although he wants to see the wind and clouds, he can also be the disciples of Luo Quan, an Qi, Xian men, Lu AO and Xu Fu."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used of a recluse
Chinese PinYin : cēn fēng sì xiá
Wind and rosy clouds
Honest and upright officials are hard to judge housework. qīng guān nán duàn jiā wù shì
frank by nature with a ready tongue. kǒu zhí xīn kuài
crane one 's neck and stand on tiptoe. yán jǐng qǐ zhǒng
suffering from both poverty and sickness. pín bìng jiāo qīn
trouble in the official seas. huàn hǎi fēng bō
shooting two birds with one stone. yī jǔ liǎng quán