tall and strong
Tall horse, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g à ot ó UD à m à, which means a tall horse. It's also a metaphor for a tall person. It's from the first time.
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the book "amazing at the first moment · Liu Dongshan praises Jishun gate": "I saw a group of riding guests coming to the gate, a total of 11, each riding a self purchased high horse."
Idiom usage
In the Qing Dynasty, Chu people won the 11th chapter of the romance of Sui and Tang Dynasties: "this man is covered with new clothes, well-dressed, armed with weapons and riding a high horse." Chapter 15 of Zeng Pu's the flowers of the evil sea in the Qing Dynasty: "on the cover is carved a general with a knife, riding a horse with a high head." "five thousand years of the world" the general is riding on a horse with a high head, and there are countless soldiers behind him.
Analysis of Idioms
A tall man and a big horse
Chinese PinYin : gāo tóu dà mǎ
tall and strong
idle rich with a fair round belly and a swelled head. cháng féi nǎo mǎn
What you say comes with what you say. yán chū huò suí
accept what is wrong as right when one grows accustomed to it. xí fēi chéng shì