Driving fast
The Chinese idiom, CH ē ch í m ǎ zh ò u in pinyin, means that cars and horses run fast. It's from the story of Yanjing's old age: Walking Horse lantern.
Idiom usage
The enemy's stronghold was not ready for defense, so he was attacked by Yuan soldiers and swept away. The fifth and seventh chapter of popular romance of Yuan history by Cai Dongfan
The origin of Idioms
Fu chadun Chong of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the annals of the age of Yanjing, a horse lantern walking on the horse Lantern: "those who walk on the horse lantern take paper-cut as a wheel, and when they boo with candles, they will go on and on, and when the candles go out, they will stop."
Chinese PinYin : chē chí mǎ zhòu
Driving fast
scattered all over like stars in the sky or men on a chessboard. xīng luó qí bù
display one 's talent for the first time. chū shì fēng máng
the husband to sing and the wife to follow. fū chàng fù suí
consultation makes knowledgeable. hào wèn zé yù
The heel and toe are at fault. zhǐ zhǒng xiāng cuò