Travel far and high
Xingyuangao, pronounced x í ngyu ǎ NSH ē NGG ā o, is a Chinese idiom, which means learning from the simple to the deep and gradually improving. From the book of poems in reply to the new Yu marquis.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Liang Jianwen emperor's answer to the new Yu Marquis and the book of Songs: "there are three poems hanging down, the wind and the cloud spit out between the lines, and the Pearl and jade are born in the words."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: between the lines, between the lines, between the lines, between the lines
Idiom usage
In Zhang Juzheng's Jin Jin Zhang Shu of Ming Dynasty, "although the words in the chapters and sentences are very simple, they are not enough to look up to the essence of Shengxue, but they can help Yuner.
Chinese PinYin : xíng yuǎn shēng gāo
Travel far and high
cannot bear to part from each other. nán fēn nán shě
When it comes, it will be settled. jì lái zhī,zé ān zhī
looked like a man who was drunk or dreaming. rú zuì rú mèng
change tactics as the situation demands. suí shí zhì yí
Give up the easy and ask for the difficult. qì yì qiú nán
cut off from the long to add to the short. póu duō yì guǎ