the dragon soars , the phoenix flies aloft -- dance in swirling
Long Xiang Feng dance, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ó ngxi á NGF è NGW ǔ, which means long Fei Feng dance. The original description of the mountains meandering majestic, but also describes the calligraphy style powerful, flexible stretch. It's from Yunlu ManChao by Zhao Yanwei of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Zhao Yanwei of Song Dynasty's Yunlu ManChao Volume 3: "the mountain comes from the northwest, like a dragon flying and a phoenix dancing. It rises down to the Phoenix Mountain."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences. example: but between us I only sign my name by hand. I only study whether my signature is powerful enough. I have used a pen. The pen of Kuang Zhong
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Long Xiang, Feng Yue
Chinese PinYin : lóng xiáng fèng wǔ
the dragon soars , the phoenix flies aloft -- dance in swirling
with fame spreading far and wide. míng wén xiá ěr
stand firmly and fight steadily. wěn zhā wěn dǎ
advance by inch and retreat by foot. cùn jìn chǐ tuì