quick flow of writer 's thoughts and imagination
The rise and fall of the rabbit, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ù Q ǐ h ú luॸ, which means that the action is very quick; it means that the writing is fast. It comes from Wen and can be painted in the story of Yanzhu in Shandang valley.
The origin of Idioms
Su Shi of Song Dynasty wrote in Wen and Ke Hua's records of Yanzhu in the valley of pengdang: "when you are in a hurry to start from it, you should keep straight and pursue what you see. It's like the rise and fall of a rabbit, and it's fleeting."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Tu Qi Fu Ju antonym: muddle with water, snail's pace
Idiom usage
Combined; used as adverbial; with commendatory meaning, used in written language. It's like a rabbit going up and down, and it's quick and quick. (Volume 10 of notes of Yuewei thatched cottage by Ji Yun of Qing Dynasty)
quick flow of writer 's thoughts and imagination
be endowed with extraordinary talents - rú chuán dà bǐ
put all sorts of things together - dōng pīn xī còu
He who follows me lives, and he who goes against me dies - shùn wǒ zhě shēng,nì wǒ zhě sǐ
a good man caught in difficult circumstances - yīng xióng qì duǎn