distant and indistinct ; vague ; misty
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is mi ǎ OMI ǎ om á NGM á ng, which means vast and boundless, but also vague and unclear. It comes from a dream of sorghum by Ma Zhiyuan in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Ma Zhiyuan's "a dream of Sorghum" the first fold: "the immortal things are boundless, what's the future, teach me to be him."
Idiom usage
Liu Ji's poem liuyaoling of Ming Dynasty: those who pursue the domain are worried like flowing water, and they are boundless. Chapter 11 of journey to the West: "but it is said that the Emperor Taizong is very remote. When his soul comes out of Wufeng building, I see the imperial army. Please drive out to hunt. "The first volume of Ling Mengchu's the surprise of making a case at the beginning of the Ming Dynasty:" now, a person who can't walk step by step in the field, who is extremely poor and bitter, has got a bet, no head and no money, and has become a rich man in the dim and dreamless place. "
distant and indistinct ; vague ; misty
Perform benevolence and righteousness - lǚ rén dǎo yì
all neglected tasks are being undertaken - bǎi huī jù jǔ