fly one 's falcons and course one 's hounds
Flying eagle and walking dog, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē iy ī ngz ǒ uqu ǎ n, which means hunting and wandering life. It comes from the tiger head card by Li Zhifu of Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom usage
But when Cao Shuangzheng was flying eagle and dog, he suddenly reported that there was a change in the city and Taifu had a watch.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: Flying Eagle and running horse, flying eagle and running dog
The origin of Idioms
Yuan · Li Zhifu "tiger head card" the first fold: "now I want to go to the depression, in addition to flying eagles and running dogs, chasing the past."
Idiom explanation
A life of hunting and wandering. The same as "flying eagle and running dog".
fly one 's falcons and course one 's hounds
The big eye looks at the small eye - dà yǎn wàng xiǎo yǎn
just a flourish of the pen and it 's done - yī huī ér jiù
Every inch of our troops is iron - chǐ bīng cùn tiě
in one 's humble position , one 's word does not carry much weight - shēn wēi yán qīng
scheme exhausted and situation pressing - jì qióng shì cù