Straightforward
It is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Shu à I à RCH é ngzhi à ng, which means to write without thinking. It describes writing carelessly and carelessly. From Tang Yu Lin literature.
Idiom explanation
Frank: without thinking, at will.
The origin of Idioms
In Tang Yulin literature written by Wang Dang of the Song Dynasty, it is said in the poem, "if you want to write 300 pieces after the book, you have to wait for manlinshuang in Dongting." Later generations say that they are straightforward. I don't know if someone in Jiangzuo sent 300 pieces of Dongting frost at the end of the paper. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object; used in writing. There is another saying: "looking back at the autumn light, it should be good to come from the East." People say that Mr. Wu is straightforward, but it is reasonable to give him. Hu Zai, Song Dynasty, the second collection of yuyinconghua in Tiaoxi, Mr. zuiyin. [usage]
Chinese PinYin : shuài ěr chéng zhāng
Straightforward
Square collar and round crown. fāng lǐng yuán guàn
All water and all mountains are poor. shuǐ jìn shān qióng
press forward to the enemy's capital. zhí dǎo huáng lóng
the house is nearby but the person is far away. shì ěr rén yuǎn