Poise
Calm, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t à IR á NZ à Ru à, describes in an emergency sinking calm, calm. It comes from the biography of Yan zhanmen and Han Yiguan.
Source of words
In the biography of yanzhanmen in the history of Jin Dynasty, it is said that "the enemy will come suddenly; although the stone will come forward, he will be calm." Hua Ershi's Han Yiguan 3: Shi Tianfu looks at Zheng Chenggong frankly and shakes his head calmly.
Idiom story
Yan zhanmen, a man of the Jin Dynasty, is loyal and cautious. He is good at setting up barracks in battle. He has a very careful plan and is very calm when encountering things. Even if his arrows are like rain, he is still calm. Everything goes according to the plan. He is very brave. He personally leads the troops to rescue Wan Yangao who was held by Li Shifu of the Western Xia Dynasty. He has made a lot of war achievements in his life.
Discrimination of words
Synonyms: look at oneself, talk and laugh at oneself, calm and unhurried, Enron as usual, Enron as usual, carefree, look as if, calm as if Antonyms: uneasy, frightened, out of spirits, up and down, uneasy, flurried
Idiom usage
The idiom "calm" is often used in Chinese sentences as adverbial modifier, subject, predicate and object. He walked into the office calmly. (2) Xiao Li calmly accepted this cruel fact. (3) people deal with it calmly. (1) I admire my father's composure. (2) being calm is the proper performance of a soldier in a time of crisis. At this critical moment, people are calm. He is as calm as usual. (1) we must be calm. (2) in an emergency, he learned to be calm.
Chinese PinYin : tài rán zì ruò
Poise
obtain gold by washing it from sand and gravel. pī shā jiǎn jīn