distant and indistinct ; vague ; misty
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is mi ǎ OMI ǎ om á NGM á ng, which means vast and boundless, but also vague and unclear. It comes from a dream of sorghum by Ma Zhiyuan in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Ma Zhiyuan's "a dream of Sorghum" the first fold: "the immortal things are boundless, what's the future, teach me to be him."
Idiom usage
Liu Ji's poem liuyaoling of Ming Dynasty: those who pursue the domain are worried like flowing water, and they are boundless. Chapter 11 of journey to the West: "but it is said that the Emperor Taizong is very remote. When his soul comes out of Wufeng building, I see the imperial army. Please drive out to hunt. "The first volume of Ling Mengchu's the surprise of making a case at the beginning of the Ming Dynasty:" now, a person who can't walk step by step in the field, who is extremely poor and bitter, has got a bet, no head and no money, and has become a rich man in the dim and dreamless place. "
Chinese PinYin : miǎo miǎo máng máng
distant and indistinct ; vague ; misty
strong soldiers and sturdy horses. bīng qiáng mǎ zhuàng
desire greatly to win the support of the wise. sī xián rú kě
till the seas dry up and the rocks decay. hǎi kū shí làn
little strokes fell great oaks. shéng jù mù duàn