gallop ahead with sword drawn
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h é NGD ā oyu è m ǎ, which means to hold a weapon and gallop on a horse. It also means to fight in the battlefield. From the whole story of flying dragon.
The origin of Idioms
The 48th chapter of the complete biography of flying dragon written by Wu Yu in Qing Dynasty: "Marshal Bai Conghui leaps across the horse and looks forward to the southern array. Fan Aineng and he Hui could not resist the enemy, so they abandoned the war and went back to their horses. "
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attributive to describe the manner of fighting on the battlefield. Chapter 11, Volume I of Li Zicheng by Yao xueyin: "he (sun chuanting) has just sat down, and this large group of people have followed in, praising him with all kinds of flattery and flattery for his clever calculation He also praised how he leaped across the battlefield and swallowed up rivers and mountains. "
gallop ahead with sword drawn
a man is not a stalk of grass or a tree - rén fēi cǎo mù
be refreshed by the cool breeze of autumn - jīn fēng sòng shuǎng