A thousand words at once
Li Ma Wan Yan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ì m ǎ w à NY á n, which means to lean on a horse and write an article immediately; it describes quick thinking. It comes from the book of Li Duanming, the first prefect of Meixi.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Shipeng of the Song Dynasty wrote in the collection of Wang Zhong and Wen Gong of Meixi, the book of Li Duanming, the supreme Minister: "the Tang Hanlin should have the dream of Changgeng, be called a banished immortal in the world, and speak all kinds of words, and the article is the law of the world."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: a thousand words depending on a horse
Idiom usage
It refers to writing an article.
Chinese PinYin : lì mǎ wàn yán
A thousand words at once
one 's soul flew beyond the skies. hún fēi tiān wài
add , subtract , multiply and divide. jiā jiǎn chéng chú
wine , women , avarice and pride -- the four cardinal vices. jiǔ sè cái qì
make the country rich and stable. fù guó ān mín