varied types and poses
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā nzhou à NGW à ntai, which means that there are many extreme states, the same as "myriad states". It comes from Xuanhe Huapu Daoshi.
The origin of Idioms
"Xuanhe Huapu · Daoshi:" as for the eagles and dogs galloping, the clouds and Dragons haunting, a thousand shapes, the potential if flying Ouyang Xiu of the Song Dynasty wrote in his "tixue Gongqi painting" that "it's not difficult to see Xu's works in a definite way, but it's also difficult to see them in a simple and meaningful way."
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate, attribute and object. example the change of rain and clouds in the morning and evening is not a model. Lu Jiuyuan and Wang Qianzhong in Song Dynasty
varied types and poses
make blind and disorderly conjectures - hú sī luàn liàng
even the grandest feast must have an end - shèng yán bì sàn
be quite distinct from each other - jīng wèi zì míng
get more than one bargained for - chī bù liǎo dōu zhe zǒu