make the mare go
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is d à Xi à NSH é NT à ng, which means that it is originally a religious language and refers to omnipotent power. The latter refers to an extraordinary skill. The description fully shows the brilliant ability. From journey to the West.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 89 of a journey to the west by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty: "he left his master and showed his magic power outside the city."
Idiom usage
Only those who have learned Buddhism and failed to do so can show their supernatural power and wipe out this generation. The fifth volume of Xu Zi Bu Yu by Yuan Mei in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : dà xiǎn shén tōng
make the mare go
gnash the teeth with angry looks. chēn mù qiē chǐ
chase the sun and drive the wind. zhú diàn zhuī fēng
take good care of one's parents. wèn ān shì shàn
provide much material for thought. fā rén shēn sī