extraordinary ideas and admirable action
Guiyiqixing, a Chinese idiom, means "Gu ī y ì Q í x í ng" in pinyin, which means brilliant thinking and unusual behavior. It's from asking the king of Chu.
Idiom explanation
Rose: beautiful stone, the metaphor is precious; Qi: beautiful jade, the metaphor is rare, beautiful.
The origin of Idioms
Song Yu's "asking the king of Chu" in the Warring States period states: "it's magnificent, wonderful and lonely."
Idiom usage
United; as an object; refers to outstanding thought and extraordinary behavior. Today, when I look at people with lofty ideas and good deeds, there are two problems. (Zhang Binglin's reform Maxim) and Zhang Binglin's four Puzzles: "although a man of noble ideas and good deeds, he seldom dares to go beyond his scope." It is also called "magnificent and wonderful". Liu Shipei's "Wenshuo · zongsao" said: "magnificent ideas and extraordinary deeds, stand aloof and hold high."
Chinese PinYin : guī yì qí xíng
extraordinary ideas and admirable action
Fighting against water and activating scale. dòu shuǐ huó lín