Long quding Lake
Longqudinghu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ó ngq ù D ǐ NGH ú, which means the death of the emperor. It comes from the book of Fengchan in historical records.
The source of the idiom is from the book of Fengchan in historical records: "the Yellow Emperor picked the bronze from Shoushan mountain and cast the tripod at the foot of Jingshan mountain. When the tripod is completed, a dragon hangs its beard to welcome the Yellow Emperor. On the Yellow Emperor's horseback, more than 70 officials from the upper palace went up, and the Dragon went up. Yu Xiaochen can't go up, but he knows how to hold the dragon's beard, pull it out, drop it, and fall the bow of the Yellow Emperor. When people look up to the Yellow Emperor, they go to heaven and hold his bow and beard, so later generations call it Dinghu and his bow Wu
Long quding Lake
thousands upon thousands of horses and soldiers -- a powerful army - qiān jūn wàn mǎ
act recklessly and care for nobody - hèng wú jì dàn
climb trees to catch water from a flint - déng mù qiú yú
extraordinary as if done by the spirits - guǐ fǔ shén gōng
pay no attention to small matters - bù hù xì xíng