Unruly and unruly
Unruly, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ě ilu ò B ù J ī, which means to describe a broad-minded, unrestrained manner. It comes from Xie Qiufu's examination of Guan Qi.
The origin of Idioms
Su Shi of the Song Dynasty wrote in his book "and later Xie Qiufu's official examination", that is, "we should not stick to the past, not lead to the present, not have harsh and hard to know articles. We should look at the unruly and unruly people, so that the world can know the article and Zhang Cheng, and we can rule it."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: unruly and unruly
Idiom usage
Today's man is an unruly person in the world, an elegant person, and a person who has no intention of disdaining all his hobbies in the world. However, his temperament must have something to repose, and he is not at ease and has no implication. Notes on Cao's strange stones by Dai Mingshi in Qing Dynasty
Unruly and unruly
hang up lamps and drape festoons - guà dēng jié cǎi
hastily to declare the matter closed - cǎo shuài shōu bīng
with a severe countenance and a harsh voice - zhèng yán lì yán