a very clever child
Renzhongqiji, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R é nzh ō ngq í J ì, which means to refer to teenagers with outstanding talent. It comes from the biography of Xu Mian in the southern history.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. The fourth volume of Cheng dengji's "the forest of learning from children" in Ming Dynasty: "the stone in the sky praises the outstanding people of children; ~, more extraordinary than a gentleman."
Analysis of Idioms
Lion in man
The origin of Idioms
Xu mianzhuan, a southern historian, said: "this so-called" a man in the middle of a horse "can reach thousands of miles."
Idiom story
In the Southern Dynasties, Xu Mian was an orphan since he was a child, and his family was very poor. But he was eager to learn. When he was six years old, he could write articles. As an adult, he was more eager to learn and tireless, and he made great achievements in literature. The clansmen praised him and said, "this is the so-called" Qi Ji "among the people. It will travel thousands of miles every day."
Chinese PinYin : rén zhōng qí jì
a very clever child
have got some dirty trick up one 's sleeve. jū xīn bù liáng
Break up one's family and subjugate one's country. pò jiā wáng guó