in high and vigorous spirits
Yixingyunfei, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ì x ì ngy ú NF ē I, which means the free and unrestrained spirit is flourishing. From preface to Tengwang Pavilion by Wang Bo of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Tang Wang Bo's "preface to Tengwang Pavilion" said: "the remote front is easy to bend, and the leisure and happiness are flying."
Idiom usage
Usage: used as predicate, attributive and adverbial; used in written language example after rain, it's more difficult to get drunk, it's hard to think of spring. Tao Zengyou's on the influence and relationship of literature
Chinese PinYin : yì xìng yún fēi
in high and vigorous spirits
to return a thing intact to its owner. wán bì guī zhào
deviate from the accepted norm. lí xián zǒu bǎn