forceful
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ì t ò UZH ǐ B è I, which means that calligraphy is strong and forceful, and the stroke of the pen almost penetrates the back of the paper. It is also often used to describe poems and other works with ingenious transportation and profound connotation. It comes from the twelve strokes of Zhang Changshi.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] big and powerful
The origin of Idioms
Yan Zhenqing of the Tang Dynasty wrote in Zhang Changshi's twelve strokes: "when he uses the sharp point, he often wants to make it through the back of the paper, which is the most successful."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate, attribute, clause; with commendatory meaning. The sixth volume of "Oubei Poetry: Lu fangweng's poetry" written by Zhao Yi in Qing Dynasty: "Lu You's poetry is written first, and it's full of paper." Huang Jingren's collection of liangdangxuan and the painting of plum by the master of Chiqiao nunnery in Qing Dynasty: "the end of the pen is too young to be straightened, and the ink is wonderful and straight to communicate with Hongmeng; it's not human's skill to spend two or three calyx on paper."
Chinese PinYin : lì tòu zhǐ bèi
forceful
pull up the rushes with their roots. bá máo lián rú
worry about troubles of one 's own imagining. yōng rén zì rǎo