Wind and rosy clouds
Feng Sixia, a Chinese idiom, is C ā NF ē ngs ì Xi á in pinyin, which means that the immortals travel everywhere. It comes from the book of fighting with Xiao Wei by Jiesi in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The book of fighting with Xiao Wei written by jiegasi in Yuan Dynasty: "if Gongcheng can lie high on an empty mountain and lead to reverie, he can be the disciples of Chao, Xu, Wu and Juan, Yan Ling and Lu Lian. Although he wants to see the wind and clouds, he can also be the disciples of Luo Quan, an Qi, Xian men, Lu AO and Xu Fu."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used of a recluse
Wind and rosy clouds
why break a butterfly on the wheel - shā jī yān yòng niú dāo
cannot find a place to stick his beak in - wú cóng zhì huì
remedy defects and rectify errors - bǔ piān jiù bì