go off into ecstasies
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ǔ t é NgR ò UF ē I, which is used to describe the speed of galloping and the spirit of wandering. It comes from the biography of Helu in the spring and Autumn period of Wu and Yue.
Idiom explanation
Teng: jump.
The origin of Idioms
Zhao Ye of the Han Dynasty wrote in the biography of Helu in the spring and Autumn period of Wu and Yue: "go after the beast, catch the bird with your hand, fly with your bones and flesh, and walk hundreds of miles on your knees."
Idiom usage
It is used as a predicate or adverbial to describe being fascinated. example Qingji is as agile as a God and can't do anything. (Chapter 74 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : gǔ téng ròu fēi
go off into ecstasies
plan very carefully with every conceivable possibility taken into account. jǔ wú yí cè
investigate sb . 's fault and try to punish him. yǐn shéng pī gēn
the paper is too short to describe one 's deep feeling. qíng cháng zhǐ duǎn
People die for money, birds die for food. rén wèi cái sǐ,niǎo wèi shí wáng
A trickle of water makes a river. juān dī chéng hé