It's just plain
Pinyin is g à NGF à NP í ngpi à o, which means broken stem and duckweed floating in the water. It's a metaphor for wandering. From Luo Li Lang.
[name]: pingpiao [explanation]: broken stem and duckweed float in the water. It's a metaphor for wandering. [source]: the second fold of Luo Li Lang by Zhang Guobin in Yuan Dynasty: "only for him, I'll go to pingpiao alone, and all three of my sons will work in their dreams" [example]: after several fierce battles, how can I avoid pingpiao. In Qing Dynasty, Kong Shangren's "Peach Blossom Fan · crying Lord" is a combination; it is used as predicate and attributive; it is a metaphor for wandering
Chinese PinYin : gěng fàn píng piāo
It's just plain
touch on sth. without going into it deeply. qīng tíng diǎn shuǐ
a dragon and a tiger in combat. lóng zhēng hǔ dòu
hundred generations of root and branches. běn zhī bǒi shì
the nearest to the flames is the first burned. jìn huǒ xiān jiāo
clear breeze and bright principles. qīng fēng gāo jié