It's late, it's fast
Source: the 23rd chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in Ming Dynasty: "sooner or later, Wu Song saw a big bug coming, flashing behind the big bug."
Li Baojia's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty (14): speaking late, then fast, in a flash, he stopped and led the ship to get up.
interpretation
Common idioms in writing. It means that things happen at a speed that can't keep up with the speed of narration. Most of them are very fast. They also mean that the words take up time when speaking, but the actions they say are very fast. Synonyms: quick eyes and quick hands, quick thunder, quick ears.
Examples
It's late, it's fast, and he's going to chop it down.
usage
Old novel language
Chinese PinYin : shuō shí chí,nà shí kuài
It's late, it's fast
Power and rank are inferior. quán zhòng zhì bēi
try by various tricks to find favour with. chuǎi hé féng yíng
one after another in close succession. jiān bèi xiāng wàng
The clouds and the mist disperse. yún tún wù sàn