full of energy ; with high spirit
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī ngsh é Nb ǎ IB è I, which means to describe special spirit. It's from flowers in the mirror.
The origin of Idioms
In the ninth chapter of Jing Hua Yuan written by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty, "think about it, take down the jade plate, break the rosegrass from the root, put it in your hands, and rub it with it. Sure enough, the jade has become mud, and its color is very red. Immediately put into the population, only feel fragrant through the brain. Just finished eating, suddenly full of energy
Idiom usage
Example: in Li zhuowu written by yuan Zongdao of Ming Dynasty: "reading a few words of Weng, you are always energetic." The fourth chapter of Shi Yukun's three heroes and five righteousness in Qing Dynasty: after Baogong bid farewell to master Li, he asked him to do it again. At this time, Bao Xing was happy and energetic. He followed him and saw Li Bao lead his horse down to orange. When Bao Gong got on the mount, Li Bao was very careful. Chapter 34 of three heroes and five righteousness by Shi Yukun in Qing Dynasty. Chapter 84 of Shi Yukun's "three heroes and five righteousness" in Qing Dynasty: when it comes to happiness, everyone is full of energy. Lu Xun anthology · Lishui: wake up in the afternoon nap, full of energy, so the theory also overwhelms the sound of the waves.
Chinese PinYin : jīng shén bǎi bèi
full of energy ; with high spirit
not a hair 's breadth in between. jiàn bù róng fà
be contented in poverty and devoted to things spiritual. gān pín lè dào
a well-behaved and dignified country girl. lín xià fēng dù
The source of literary works. wén xíng chū chǔ
live on the land and eat what it produces. shí máo jiàn tǔ
as fast as the hare runs and as swift as the wild duck starts flying. tǔ sǐ fú jǔ
sow the seeds of discord everywhere. tiáo sān wò sì
starving people fill the land. āi hóng biàn yě