valiant and heroic in bearing
Yingzisashuang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī ngz ī s à Shu ǎ ng, which means that a man is full of energy, high spirited and brave. It can also be said that women are full of vigor and vitality, and have a valiant temperament. It's from "a gift from Danqing to general Cao".
Idiom usage
Chen Qitong's "thousands of rivers and thousands of mountains" Scene 2: "Captain Wu, Li Fenglian and the propaganda team members who are wearing broadswords - Di Chong Shang."
The origin of Idioms
Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty, in his book "Danqing is a gift to general Cao", said that "Baogong, egong and Mao launched a valiant war."
Chinese PinYin : yīng zī sà shuǎng
valiant and heroic in bearing
break the literature into pieces and take one paragraph or few sentences. duàn zhāng jié jù
The pearls and the stones meet each other. zhū bì jiāo huī
the spring snow -- a highbrow song. yáng chūn bái xuě