off the reel
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ā ot ā ob ù Du à n, which means metaphor is as continuous as running water. From the three heroes and five righteousness.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 21 of three heroes and five righteousness written by Shi Yukun in the Qing Dynasty: Zhan Zhao said that he heard the words of the little Taoist priest and the woman in the crossing at night, "so he rushed to the grand master's garden and saw the old Taoist worshipping the altar. The bottle exploded and killed the old Taoist priest. He wrapped up the wooden man to come." Mr. Zhan talked about it again and again. When Bao Gong heard this, he woke up like a dream.
Idiom usage
It is used as adverbial and attributive. The 25th chapter of biography of heroes and heroines by Wen Kang of Qing Dynasty: "the general made a breakthrough, and was answered by the girl. In a voluble way, he gathered the four of them together for more than 200 weeks, discussed a fresh move for the general and the whole year, and said what I can see from each other." Chapter 79 of Li Ruzhen's Jing Hua Yuan in Qing Dynasty: "all I want is the jade bracelet. My sister zhiqingdian talks with them about the algorithm, which is endless."
Chinese PinYin : tāo tāo bù duàn
off the reel
beyond the ken of god or devil. guǐ shén bù cè
forsake heresy and return to the truth. fǎn xié guī zhèng