fluent
Flying birds frighten snakes, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē ini ǎ OJ ī ngsh é, which means like flying birds into the forest and frightened snakes into the grass. The cursive script is natural and fluent. It's from FA Shu Yuan.
The origin of Idioms
FA Shu Yuan: "in the Tang Dynasty, a monk shiyalou was good at cursive writing. He once wrote a couplet:" birds enter the forest, snakes enter the grass. "
Idiom story
Shiyalou was a monk in Tang Dynasty. He lived in temples for a long time, burning incense and chanting sutras. Other monks secretly play chess to sleep in their spare time, but shiyalou bought inkstone, ink pen and paper to practice calligraphy. Sometimes in the middle of the night, he was still practicing hard. As the years passed, he became more and more proficient in writing. Many people who burn incense and worship Buddha also come to ask him to write. He agreed one by one. His cursive writing is especially elegant and unrestrained. Someone asked him, "how is cursive script good?" Shiyalou wrote eight words: "birds into the forest, startle the snake into the grass!" "Flying birds frighten snakes" describes the font as elegant as a bird flying, with strong strokes, even snakes are frightened.
Idiom usage
It is often used in figurative sentences
fluent
enormously proud of one's success - chóu chú mǎn zhì
take advantage of a favourable trend - jiè shuǐ tuī chuán
take on an altogether new aspect - huàn rán yī xīn
Do not conspire with each other - bù xiāng wéi móu
Know the little and know the best - zhī wēi zhī zhāng