great talent and bold vision
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi ó NGC á ID à L ü è, which means having outstanding intelligence and grand strategy. It comes from the book of the Han Dynasty, Emperor Wu Ji Zan.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Han, Ji Zan of Emperor Wu said, "if Emperor Wu's talent is great, he will not change his writing and scenery to help the people. Although it is called in the book of songs and the book of Han, how can it be added?"
Analysis of Idioms
words whose meaning is similar
The world and the earth
antonym
ordinary
Idiom usage
Combined; as object and attribute; with commendatory meaning
[example]
Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty ordered two generals Wei Qing and Huo Qubing to send out troops to sweep the Hun's nest, which was the fastest thing in history. The second chapter of the lion's roar by Chen Tianhua in Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
During the Western Han Dynasty, agriculture got unprecedented development and the country was stable and United. After Emperor Wu of Han Dynasty ascended the throne, he deposed all schools of thought and respected Confucian culture alone. He recruited a wide range of talents, promoted universities, enjoyed great achievements and did not care about people's sufferings. Ban Gu commented in the book of Han Dynasty: "if Emperor Wu's talent is great, he will not change his literary style, but be polite and thrifty to help the people."
Chinese PinYin : xióng cái dà lüè
great talent and bold vision
dedicate oneself to one's writings. yǎng wū zhù shū
remove mountains and drain seas. yí shān zào hǎi
gain victory with unstained swords. bīng bù xuè rèn