forceful and vigorous
Nu long long Ji, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is n ù n í K ě J ì, which means to describe the vigorous and unrestrained calligraphy. It comes from the biography of Xu Hao in the new Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Dragon: lion dragon, namely lion; Ji: steed. Like an angry lion poking a stone, a thirsty horse running to the spring.
The origin of Idioms
Xu Haozhuan in the new book of Tang Dynasty: "at the beginning, Hao Fu Qiao was good at writing. He taught Hao by law and benefited his work. There are forty-two screens in the book, all of which are equipped with eight styles. The grass is especially skillful. The way of the world is like this: "when you are angry, you pick stones, and you yearn for horses and springs." "Cloud"
Chinese PinYin : nù ní kě jì
forceful and vigorous
touch gold and turn it into iron -- miscorrect a piece of writing. diǎn jīn chéng tiě
it is advancing sometimes to seem retreating. jìn dào ruò tuì
People don't know, ghosts don't know. rén bù zhī,guǐ bù jué
Follow the precepts of frost. lǚ shuāng zhī jiè