Flying high and far
Gaofeiyuanju, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā of ē iyu ǎ NJ ǔ, meaning to fly high and far, which means to have a bright future. From Shuoyuan · 8 · Zunxian · 13.
Idiom explanation
Example: fly, go.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Xiang of the Han Dynasty wrote in Shuo yuan · 8 · Zun Xian · 13 Jie: "the Swan flies high and far, and it depends on six he."
Idiom usage
The future is broad. Example: Song wentianxiang's circulation calendar of Tixing Jiesi and pacifying Si Pingkou: "if you only hold a grand array, then [Kou] will fly high and far, and nothing will happen." Liu Xun of the Yuan Dynasty wrote in his book general discussion of seclusion · Neo Confucianism 3: "it is difficult to move down a fool, and you are confused. You can't fly high and seek to avoid the people with horizontal eyes." Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty wrote in "hang zhi'er · Zhang" that "in the season when you have won the hand, you can fly high and fly high." Liu Tao of Song Dynasty wrote the poem "changing the tune of Mantingfang:" I will tell you that you have a long way to go, and there will never be any setbacks in your future. " Song Chen Liang's book with Prime Minister Ye (2): "I was recorded by Yousi in order to fill in the average number of students. If you can't fly far and talk about it, how dare you not know the meaning of creation, but rather to compare right with wrong, and to be interested in the field of honor and disgrace, so that you don't realize yourself! " Xu Guangqi of the Ming Dynasty wrote: "there are many useful materials in the painting of tuntian in the imperial edict of the Ming Dynasty In the appendix of Guo Moruo's nanguancao, Xia wanchunxia: "there is a saying in xilinyekui:" I want to come back and shake my wings, but I will enter Luoyi at one stroke. " It is also enough to prove that he was arrested in his hometown, and that his "return" is intended to make a difference and make a long-term progress. "
Chinese PinYin : gāo fēi yuǎn jǔ
Flying high and far
The fur of a thousand gold is not the armpit of a fox. qiān jīn zhī qiú,fēi yī hú zhī yè