Travel with flying stars
It is an idiom with the pronunciation of X à ngch í di à NZ à u, which means extremely fast.
source
In Yuan Dynasty, Yang Xianzhi's xiaoxiangyu, the wedge: "there is no hair on the legs and a moustache on the mouth. When the stars are flying fast, there will be long patrols along both sides of the river, which will be added as the paian division." it's so easy to pull GUI Ting out of the hotel, drag him on the train and rush to the front. (Chapter one, two and three of the popular romance of the Republic of China by Cai Dongfan and Xu Xianfu)
explain
Gallop: gallop; walk: run. Like stars, like lightning. The description is extremely quick. It's so easy to pull GUI Ting out of the hotel, drag him on the train and rush to the front. (Chapter one, two and three of the popular romance of the Republic of China by Cai Dongfan and Xu Xianfu)
usage
As an attributive or adverbial; extremely quick in description
Chinese PinYin : xīng chí diàn zǒu
Travel with flying stars
From the plain to the lonely. píng dì qǐ gū dīng
worse off than some, better off than many. bǐ shàng bù zú,bǐ xià yǒu yú