extremely pressing
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í R ú x ī nghu ǒ, which means that the light like a meteor flashes through the sky. The description is very urgent. From the petition.
The origin of Idioms
In Li Mi's Chen Qing Biao of Jin Dynasty, "the State Department is in a hurry."
Idiom usage
The description is very urgent
Examples
Although the boudoir minister's heart ~, but wan like Tian Fengzhen's brother Tian Ting married. (the 94th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty)
Idiom story
Li mi used to be an official in Shu Han, but later Shu Han died. He wanted to live in seclusion. Although Jin Dynasty repeatedly asked him to be an official, he refused. Later, Emperor Wu of the Jin Dynasty issued an imperial edict to ask him to come out to do horse washing. Li Mi had to write a play table for Emperor Wu of the Jin Dynasty, euphemistically saying that he could not take office. There are a few sentences in the play list that say like this: "the The sheriff and magistrate told me to go on the road at once; the state also sent people home to urge me, which was as urgent as a meteor in the sky. I really want to accept the emperor's appointment and work for my country immediately, but my grandmother Liu's illness is getting worse and worse every day. "
(from Li Mi's petition)
Discrimination of words
Be in a hurry
[antonym] leisurely and slow
Chinese PinYin : jí rú xīng huǒ
extremely pressing
fire at the target a hundred times without a single miss. bǎi fā bǎi zhòng
remedy defects and rectify errors. bǔ piān jiù bì
demolish with penetrating criticism. biān bì zhuó lǐ
violent political or social upheavals. tiān bēng dì jiě