broadmined and knowledgeable
Wang yanghaobo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w à ngy á NGH à ob ó, which means to describe a person's magnanimity, bold and unconstrained diction and erudition, like the boundless water. It comes from the book of answers to master Liu.
The origin of Idioms
In Lu You's answer to master Liu's book of Song Dynasty, it is said that "virtue is the learning of the predecessors, which accumulates the small to become the big, changes what they have and asks what they can not. So it's a long time. It's a vast ocean. It should be a hundred, but not a long time. "
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive; refers to a person's temperament or learning. He was born in Chuzhou. Although he stuttered, he was extremely sensitive. He could recite many classics. The diction is vast, and his spirit is like that of Ye. History of the Yuan Dynasty, biography of Confucianism II, Chen Yizeng
Chinese PinYin : wāng yáng hào bó
broadmined and knowledgeable
take unnecessary pains to study an insignificant problem. zuān niú jiǎo jiān
change existing habits and customs. gé fēng yì sú
have neither fault to find with nor praise to bestow. wú jiù wú yù
a hundred flowers contend in beauty. bǎi huā zhēng yàn
two dragons are playing with a pearl. èr lóng xì zhū