Loose and uninhibited
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Tu ò ch í B ù J ī, which means unrestrained. From the book of Han.
The origin of Idioms
"Hanshu" says: "the horse that the husband drives, the person who drives, also is in Royal just."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Bohemian, dissolute
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
[example]
Zhang Shizhao's brief introduction to Zhao Boxian: "he was excited by his spirit, relaxed and uninhibited. He was talked about by wine and had no place to avoid."
Chinese PinYin : tuò chí bù jī
Loose and uninhibited
ready to accept either course. mó léng liǎng kě
knit one 's brows in despair. chóu méi suǒ yǎn
give one's authority to others. dào chí tài ē