with great speed
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zhu ī f ē ngzh ú R ì, which means extremely fast. The multi fingered horse galloped fast. It comes from the monument to the God of Liang Gong, general Mingwei of the Later Zhou Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yang Jiong of the Tang Dynasty wrote in the tablet of the divine way of Liang Gong, the general of Ming Wei in the Later Zhou Dynasty: "if we encourage the title of the policy, we will pursue the wind and the day by day, and if we add scissors and whisks, we will never run to the stars."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or adverbial; used in figurative sentences
Discrimination of words
Synonyms: chasing the wind, chasing the wind, chasing the wind
Chinese PinYin : zhuī fēng zhú rì
with great speed
the wise bird chooses its branch. zé zhǔ ér shì
Follow the wind in the grass. cǎo yǎn fēng cóng
do things offensive to god and reason. wéi tiān hài lǐ