have one's words at hand
To grasp something with one's fingers. I'll bring it. It refers to the free choice of words or the use of allusions when writing articles without thinking.
The origin of Idioms
Song Sushi's Ci Yun Kong Yi Fu's collection of the ancients' sentences: "the beauty of the former son is only for the king, and it's natural to take it by hand."
Idiom usage
Lu You of Song Dynasty. The portrait of koulai Gong in autumn breeze Pavilion: "the poem of Badong is a statecraft, which can be startled if you pick it up easily." Tao Zongyi of the Yuan Dynasty, Volume 24 of the record of stopping farming in the South Village. Being stingy with scholars: a Weng's painting is like saying, and he has all kinds of good paintings at his fingertips. " The first fold of Du Liu Cui by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty. According to Buqing's xiawai Jixie · Zhuoshu · ancient book collection in Qingping: "cover the ancient people's writing, drive away the ancient books, and pick them up at will."
Chinese PinYin : xìn shǒu niān lái
have one's words at hand
a carbuncle neglected becomes the bane of your life. yǎng yōng yí huàn
try by various tricks to find favour with. chuǎi hé féng yíng
rise head and shoulders above others. chū rén tóu dì