valiant
The Chinese idiom, H ǔ B ù L ó NGX í ng in pinyin, means that the original description of the emperor's manner is different from the general, and later also describes the general's heroic posture. It comes from the book of song, the first chapter of Emperor Wu.
The origin of Idioms
The book of the Song Dynasty, the first chapter of Emperor Wu, says, "Liu Yulong's tiger stride is extraordinary. I'm afraid he won't be taken by others, so he should be taken care of as soon as possible."
Idiom usage
The emperor's manner is different from that of the other emperors. The tenth chapter of the history of pain by Wu Jianren in Qing Dynasty
valiant
one 's criminal conspiracy was unmasked - dōng chuāng shì fàn
the grass looks like a green carpet - lǜ cǎo rú yīn
Paint the ground and carve the wood - huà dì kè mù
one 's eyes grow round with delight at the sight of money - jiàn qián yǎn kāi