have a brilliant mind and a broad vision
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C á Ig ā oy ì Gu ǎ ng, which means a talented person with lofty ideals. From the Analects of Confucius advanced.
The origin of Idioms
In the Tang Yingui signature by Hu Zhenheng of the Ming Dynasty, it is said that "most of his talents are high and broad-minded, just like Kong Beihai's disciples."
Idiom usage
It is a combination; it is a predicate, an attribute and a complement; it has a high ability to describe and a great ideal.
Examples
The devil is made by man, the elephant by heart. He is talented and broad-minded. Notes of Yuewei thatched cottage: two stories
In the Analects of Confucius: Advanced: "Zi Gong asked:" is the teacher and the businessman also virtuous? "Zi said:" the teacher has also passed, and the businessman is not as good. " He said, "but the teacher is better and better." Confucius said, "too much is worse." Zhu Xi's note: "Zi Zhang is talented and broad-minded, but good is difficult, so he often goes through the middle."
have a brilliant mind and a broad vision
excessive fondness of making literary quotations and historical allusions - diào shū dài
hate the wicked and point out only the evil which one has done - wù wù cóng duǎn
come back with a flick of one 's sleeve - fú xiù ér guī
Better be a chicken than a cow - nìng wéi jī kǒu,wú wéi niú hòu
leave a stink for ten thousand years - yí chòu wàn nián
all blend into one harmonious whole - róng yú yī lú