become an immortal
It is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin t é ngy ú NJI à w à, which means that mythology describes that immortals, demons or people who have acquired the Tao can fly in the air by the clouds. It also describes people's abnormal behavior in body and mind. It also describes supernatural abilities or skills. From Lao Jun Tang.
The origin of Idioms
The second fold of Zheng Dehui's laojuntang in Yuan Dynasty: "if you want to fly out of prison, you will fly out of prison with two wings on your arms." The third chapter of the journey to the West written by Wu Chengen of the Ming Dynasty: "he put down his heart, day by day, soared in the clouds, traveled all over the world, and enjoyed thousands of mountains."
Analysis of Idioms
[antonym] down-to-earth, rooted, deep-rooted
Idiom usage
When I was ill, I lay in bed as if I were flying in the clouds. 2. Last night, I drove all night; today, I was in class; I felt dizzy; I felt like driving through the clouds. Chapter 4 of the first part of the song of youth by Yang Mo: "Tao is sitting on a stool, his head is dizzy, as if he is flying in the clouds." Yao xueyin "Li Zicheng" Volume 1 Chapter 3: "this is not a horse, it is a white dragon flying in the clouds! A white dragon. " 5. The monkey king has a magic power. He can fly through the clouds and drive through the fog. He can make 72 changes.
Chinese PinYin : téng yún jià wù
become an immortal
vow to annihilate the rebels. kòu jí zhōng liú
two tigers cannot live on the same mountain. guó wú èr jūn
Exchange wine for scarlet beetle. jīn guī huàn jiǔ
things that reopen sb . 's wound. chù wù shāng qíng