lead a fast
Bohemian, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f à NGD à NGB à J à, which means indulgent, unrestrained and unrestrained. It comes from the biography of Wang Chang in the book of Jin.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of Jin, biography of Wang Chang Wen:" less famous for talent and learning, and bohemian, the state capital is not on the life
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as attributive and object with derogatory meaning. example usually with a group of good friends, only to poetry and wine entertainment, or to the landscape of the eyes, ~. Ling Mengchu, Ming Dynasty, Volume 16 of his book "the surprise of the first carving of a table" Volume 16 of his book "the surprise of the first carving of a table" reads: "usually, with a group of good friends, they only amuse themselves with poetry and wine, or indulge themselves in landscape, they are uninhibited." Fu Qing's character was very bohemian. In this way, he was even more arrogant. Sometimes he even boasted to others: "I earned the reputation of my father-in-law's army for him." Since Yue Fei was appointed as the governor of Tongtai, in order to enforce military discipline, he did not indulge Fu Qing as before. Kuchan appreciates Daqian's Bohemian character and his hermit style. The dignity, self-confidence, ambition and unrestrained habits of a woman like her began to recover and gradually revealed In the new circle, she has a new saying: "their cadres' children..." How.
Chinese PinYin : fàng dàng bù jī
lead a fast
for the state and the people. wéi guó wéi mín
Better a broken jade than a broken one. nìng kě yù suì,bù néng wǎ quán
cause destruction to both sides. liǎng bài jù shāng
I'd like to take credit for it. yāo gōng xī chǒng
so subtle as to be difficult to guess what comes next. shén miào mò cè
the mountains are high and the water wide. shān yáo lù yuǎn