Flying in the air
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is ti ā OSH ē NF ē iz ú, which means to shoot an arrow to kill the enemy alone. He was brave in killing the enemy and looked death as if he were home. From Yang gei Shi Lei.
The origin of Idioms
Yan Yanzhi's "Yang gei Shi Lei" in the Southern Song Dynasty: "Zan swore that he would go to the city and fly."
Idiom usage
According to the epitaph of chasikin cemetery written by Feng Guifen in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "in the face of danger, you will never change, you will fly."
Chinese PinYin : tiāo shēn fēi zú
Flying in the air
go for the small things and miss things that are worthwhile. tān xiǎo shī dà
the dripping dripping water freezes. dī shuǐ chéng bīng
a symbol of war in ancient china. jīn gē tiě qí