Kicking the patio
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is t ī Ti ā NN ò NGJ ǐ ng, which means everything can be done from heaven to earth. Describe the ability is big, ability is strong. Also describes the naughty to the extreme. It comes from the second book of dongtanglao.
Analysis of Idioms
From heaven to earth
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Qin Jianfu's the second fold of dongtanglao: "you have Zuo Ci's skill of kicking tiannongjing, and Xiang Yu's skill of pulling up the mountain is the same as that of lifting the tripod."
Idiom usage
Combined; as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning. All the children in our city are clever. In Qing Dynasty, Cao Xueqin's a dream of Red Mansions, chapter 81, and journey to the west, Chapter 20: "my grandson also catches strange and subdues evil. They all know something about crouching tigers, catching dragons and kicking in the air. " Feng Weimin of Ming Dynasty's "feeling the time" Song: "who's cat and dog is afraid of smelling fishy, pretends to be clean, hides his ears and steals his bell, kicks the sky and makes a scene, and thieves don't reflect on themselves." Chapter 3 and Chapter 6 of marriage to awaken the world: "the man who coaxes him firmly believes that he is a sincere and honest woman. Some of them don't guard against leisure, but he kicks in the back." Wu Mingshi's "battle PI Tong. The first fold": "let you play in the courtyard, dare to teach you a piece of time and soul."
Chinese PinYin : tī tiān nòng jǐng
Kicking the patio
one must be thorough in exterminating an evil. chú è wù běn
be content with staying where one is. gù bù zì huà