turn round on one 's gallopingsteed and aim an arrow at
Leaping Horse and bending bow, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Yu è m ǎ w ā ng ō ng, meaning galloping horse circling, bow to shoot. To put on a good posture and prepare for battle. In fact, he did not act immediately. It comes from the poem "pheasant with arrow" by Han Yu of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu's poem "pheasant with arrow" in Tang Dynasty: "if the general wants to subdue people with skill, he will bow and bow, but he will not send."
Idiom usage
It's not possible for those who came to garrison to have dozens of Jianer, who were granted the title of self-service. (preface to the gift of general wan to situ Gong by Hou Fangyu in Qing Dynasty)
Analysis of Idioms
Bow and bend
Chinese PinYin : yuè mǎ wān gōng
turn round on one 's gallopingsteed and aim an arrow at
A donkey's lips are not the same as a horse's. lǘ chún bù duì mǎ zuǐ
it is advancing sometimes to seem retreating. jìn dào ruò tuì