bright and brave
Sassou yingzi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s à Shu à ngy à ngz à, which means to describe a handsome, powerful and energetic appearance. It's from "a gift from Danqing to general Cao".
Idiom explanation
Sassou: bold and vigorous; yingzi: heroic and powerful posture.
The origin of Idioms
Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty, in his book "Danqing is a gift to general Cao", said that "Baogong, egong and Mao launched a fierce battle."
Idiom usage
It's formal; it's predicate and attributive; it describes a person's energetic and powerful appearance. Example five foot gun, the first light of dawn. The Chinese people have many ambitions. They don't like to wear red clothes and love to be armed. Mao Zedong's poem "photo for female militia"
bright and brave
Flies follow the tail of a steed and fly thousands of miles - yíng fù jì wěi ér zhì qiān lǐ
make the old and new contrast and complement each other - xiāng dé yì zhāng
high carriage and team of four horses - gāo chē sì mǎ