Spirited
Shenliuqilang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh é NLI ú Q à ch à ng, which means the spirit is fluent and accessible. It comes from the first question of Cheng CE in Xinwei examination by Zhang Juzheng of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Juzheng of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the first question of Xinwei Huishi chengce: "Ye Chengping, the husband and Yi, is determined to abide by the law, to follow the common practice, and to play is easy to live, but the monarch and his officials are so in harmony with each other that they are full of spirit and harmony between heaven and earth."
Idiom explanation
It means that the spirit is fluent and accessible.
Spirited
resign from office and live in seclusion - guà guān guī qù
and then become enemies with each other - fǎn mù chéng chóu
the hustle and bustle of large crowds - xī lái rǎng wǎng
compete with each other for beauty of looks - zhēng qí dòu yàn
Hate each other and know each other well - hèn xiāng zhī wǎn