Horses are like dragons
Ma ruyoulong, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ǎ R ú y ó UL ó ng, which means to describe the bustling scene of people and horses. It comes from empress Ma of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Fan Ye wrote "empress Ma of Ming Dynasty" in the book of the empress of the later Han Dynasty: "when you see a stranger asking for a living person, the car is like running water, and the horse is like a dragon."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; as predicate and object; describes the prosperity of many people. Xiaosa's Ci poets play games with horses and cars. Yu Huai's anecdotes of Banqiao in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : mǎ rú yóu lóng
Horses are like dragons
High aptitude and profound knowledge. cái gāo zhì shēn
When the water is clear, there is no fish. shuǐ zhì qīng wú yú
the house is nearby but the person is far away. shì ěr rén yáo
indulge in arbitrary decisions and peremptory actions. dú duàn dú xíng