Galloping
Chi Ma Fei Yu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C è m ǎ f ē iy ú, which means to drive a carriage at a high speed. It comes from the biography of Gou Jian's return to China in Wu Yue spring and Autumn period.
The origin of Idioms
Zhao Ye of the Han Dynasty wrote in the spring and Autumn Annals of Wu and Yue, the biography of Gou Jian's return to his country: "when the chariot drove and the people left, the king of Yue drove his horse to fly, so he restored the palace."
Idiom usage
To drive at a high speed.
Chinese PinYin : cè mǎ fēi yú
Galloping
divide the hairpins and break the mirrors. fēn chāi pò jìng
high carriage and four horses -- symbol of wealth and nobility. sì mǎ xuān chē
use a capable man in spite of his faults. qì xiá qǔ yòng
The branch is bigger than the root. zhī dà yù běn