be by nature unconventional and straight forward
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Lu ò Tu ù B ù J ī, which means to describe the unconstrained human nature and loose behavior. It comes from the biography of Yang Su in northern history.
The origin of Idioms
Yang suzhuan, a northern historian, said: "there is great ambition in shaoluotuo, regardless of the details."
Idiom usage
It can be used as a predicate or attributive to describe people freely. "There is a Jiansheng, whose surname is he, whose name is Ying Xiang, whose name is Da Qing. He is romantic, handsome, uninhibited, and good at voice and color. " Ahsu is uninhibited, just like her father. (Mao Dun's midnight) uninhibited. Chapter five of Zhang Hong's xunie Haihua: "but Beishan, I'm afraid you are not very welcome in front of the jade mirror. I advise you to pay more attention to embellishment in the future, so that you can enjoy less pity.
be by nature unconventional and straight forward
like the soaring phoenix and the rising dragon - qǐ fèng téng jiāo
follow up a victory with hot pursuit - chéng shèng zhuī jī
lessons drawn from others ' mistakes - hòu chē zhī jiè
man should have feeling of shame - xiàng shǔ yǒu pí