An escape from the dust
Yi Chen Duan Yang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ì ch é NDU à NY à ng, which means that a horse raises dust and breaks Ma Yang when it runs. A horse runs fast. It comes from the biography of Liu by Xu yaozuo of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In his biography of the Liu family, Xu yaozuo of the Tang Dynasty said, "I went up to the hall, sent out Yi to show the Liu family, crossed the pommel horse with him, broke away the dust, and suddenly even died."
Idiom usage
Used as an attributive or adverbial; used in writing. example: Zuozhuan. Ten years of Xianggong: "the Marquis of Qi will go to the post Tang. The crown prince and Guo Rong buckled the horse and said: 'the teacher is quick and quick, and he is a little bit quick. And the Lord of the country can not be light, light is lost, you will treat it! The prince will break the martingale with his sword. "
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: run away
Chinese PinYin : yì chén duàn yāng
An escape from the dust
The army did not move, food and grass first. bīng mǎ wèi dòng, liáng cǎo xiān xíng
go to one 's death unflinchingly. cóng róng jiù yì