crouch style
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ó ngTi à oh à w à, which means writing style and calligraphy is vigorous. From the book review of ancient and modern times by Liang Yuan ang of the Southern Dynasty.
Idioms and allusions
The source of the book of Jin, volume 92, biographies of Wenyuan, Chu Tao, 238, is the establishment of prefectures. Wu Ping, Zhao Bushang Shulang. When Zhang Hua saw it, he called it Lu Ji and said, "your brother long yueyunjin, Gu Yanxian, Feng mingchaoyang, he said that the treasure of Dongnan had been exhausted and he did not want to see Chu Sheng again. "Ji said," if you don't see it, you will hear it. Hua said, "so we know that the virtue of Yanzhou is not isolated, and the treasure of Chuanyue is not empty. "Move nine true Taishou, turn to lieutenant. Fifty five years old. In the book review of ancient and modern times by Liang Yuan ang in the Southern Dynasty, it is said that "Xiao Si's words are continuous in ink, and their characters are strong and powerful, like dragons jumping at the gate of heaven, tigers lying in Fengge." Example: Volume 4 of Bai Yu Zhai CI Hua written by Chen tingzhuo of Qing Dynasty: "Xiangxue's Lanling king is written from the opposite side to the end of the sentence:" how can I teach such a scene without reading it? " One stroke wakes up, and it stops abruptly. There is something strange about using a stroke. " Kang Youwei's guangyizhou Shuangji: Sui Dynasty: "Pei Jingmin is even and neat, and his attitude is peaceful; Lingqing pool has the tendency of flying and throwing, and it is especially wonderful to see the Dragon leaping and tiger lying." Jin Songcen's view of art in literature: "in the other day, the Dragon leaps and the tiger lies, grinding the cliff, the top of Kunlun, the waves surge and the clouds fall, and Zhangle is in the cave."
Discrimination of words
Synonyms: Dragon leaping and Tiger Leaping, dragon leaping and tiger crouching
Chinese PinYin : lóng tiào hǔ wò
crouch style
be too young and unable to understand how people should behave. shào bù gēng shì
Have eyes but not know Mount Tai. yǒu yǎn bù shí tài shān
play off one power against another. yǐ yí gōng yí
To nourish oneself is to injure one's health. yǐ yǎng shāng shēn
The same source and the same flow. tóng yuán gòng liú