draw paint everywhere
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ō NGT ú x ī m ǒ, which means to draw freely with a pen. It comes from the miscellaneous notes of Tang Zhiyan · Ci'en Temple's travel Fu.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Dingbao's "Tang Zhiyan · Ci'en Temple Title tour Fu Yong Zaji" in the Five Dynasties: "report not poor! When she was three or five years old, she used to come here and there. "
Idiom usage
I used to learn how to draw two strokes of mountains and rivers. How long have I been in trouble, but I still can't. In Chapter 37 of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in the Qing Dynasty, it is said that although one method has been changed today, one person will be changed tomorrow. I have never seen it help. I used to learn how to paint two kinds of landscapes. After a lot of trouble, I still can't learn.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: to rub things in the East and in the west, to rub paint on the face, to scribble on the face and [antonym]: to be meticulous
Chinese PinYin : dōng tú xī mǒ
draw paint everywhere
The bee is infatuated with the butterfly. fēng mí dié liàn
there is nothing comparable to this. wú kě bǐ nì
strike terror in one 's heart. hún fēi dǎn chàn