Flying like a swan
Hu Zhi Luan Xiang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ú zh ì Lu á nxi á ng, which means to describe the stroke is straight and elegant. It comes from "imitating the Dharma script in the spare time of tens of thousands of years, specially giving each of the ministers a table of thanks.".
The origin of Idioms
Pu Songling of the Qing Dynasty wrote a special table of thanks given to each of the ministers by imitating the Dharma script in his spare time of more than ten thousand years, which said: "when you are at the end of the Qing Dynasty, Xi presents you the same name, and you like the snake and vermis lingering between the lines; when you are at the end of the Qing Dynasty, Liu Yan writes them together, you are surprised by the swans on the paper."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Chinese PinYin : hú zhì luán xiáng
Flying like a swan
Watching and listening to the wind. guān huà tīng fēng
be fascinated by sb . 's compelling beauty. shén hún piāo dàng