The Dragon flies and the tiger leaps
Dragon Flying Tiger Leaping, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ó NGF à IH à Ti à o, which means the pen is vigorous and unrestrained. It comes from the third part of Renbu in wuzazu by Xie Zhaohe of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as attributive or adverbial; used in calligraphy, etc
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: dragon flying and Phoenix dancing
The origin of Idioms
Xie Zhaohe of Ming Dynasty wrote in the third chapter of Renbu of wuzazu: "the right general (Wang Xizhi) has cast hundreds of pottery, and has been in and out of thousands of categories. He can pick them up easily, and they are all satisfied. The metaphor of the dragon flying and the Tiger Leaping has not yet reached its full height. It is a complete collection in Xun's book. "
Idiom explanation
It is used to describe the vigorous and unrestrained style of writing.
Chinese PinYin : lóng fēi hǔ tiào
The Dragon flies and the tiger leaps
said of high moral behavior. jīn shēng yù zhèn
pass on generation after generation. dài dài xiāng chuán
The loss is more than the deficiency. sǔn yǒu yú bǔ bù zú
a hundred mouths cannot explain it away. bǎi huì nán biàn