whatever one wishes to say , his pen follows
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ì Z à IB ǐ Xi ā n, which means to write, draw or write articles, first conceive mature, then write. It comes from Wang Xizhi of Jin Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Xizhi of the Jin Dynasty wrote: "if a man wants to write, he should first study the ink, concentrate on meditation, anticipate the size of the characters, bend back and vibrate, connect the muscles and veins, and then write the characters."
Idiom usage
In addition, it can be used as the subject and predicate in the article. (Volume I of Bai Yu Zhai CI Hua by Chen tingzhuo in Qing Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : yì zài bǐ xiān
whatever one wishes to say , his pen follows
covering the dagger with a smile. xiào lǐ cáng dāo
Headache for head, foot pain for foot. tóu tòng zhì tóu,zú tòng zhì zú
A toad wants to eat a swan. lài há ma xiǎng chī tiān é ròu