the vapour rose up to the sky
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ì t ū NNI ú D ǒ u, which means to describe a great spirit. It's from yongbaojian.
Analysis of Idioms
It's like fighting a bull or fighting a bull
The origin of Idioms
Cui Rong's Ode to the sword in Tang Dynasty: "the box is full of air and the ox is fighting, and the mountain is turning into a pulley."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as predicate and attribute; used in figurative sentences; with commendatory meaning. example song Yue Fei's poem "on the red cliff of green mud" says: "the bull fighting is magnificent, and he vows to avenge the king for the true festival." When you look at Lansun, you are angry. You know you are not waiting for idle people. In Ming Dynasty, Hu Wenhuan's Anthology of Qun Yin Lei, the story of flat peach, the birthday of sun Xiangqing and Fu Lei's family letter, January 26, 1955: "a nation with such a traditional poet's soul should have the performance of being arrogant."
Chinese PinYin : qì tūn niú dǒu
the vapour rose up to the sky
Buy old cattle across the mountain. gé shān mǎi lǎo niú
business with a small capital. xiǎo běn jīng yíng
favours weighty as a mountain. ēn zhòng tài shān
as the medicine took effect , the symptoms lessened. yào dào bìng chú
be happy and pleased with oneself. yí rán zì dé