Be uninhibited
In Chinese, Pinyin is Tu ò m é NGB ù J ī, which means unrestrained and unrestrained. From the book of Han.
The origin of Idioms
"Hanshu" says: "the horse that the husband drives, the person who drives, also is in Royal just."
Idiom usage
Examples
In Huang Zhouxing's biography of Bu Zhang Ling and Cui Ying in the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "when I heard that Ling Li was relaxed and uninhibited, I was deprived of all his life."
Zhang Shizhao's brief introduction to Zhao Boxian: "he was excited and relaxed. He was talked about by the wine and had no place to avoid."
Be uninhibited
Distinguish between the things and the place to live - biàn wù jū fāng
one 's schemes are poor and his strength is exhausted - jì qióng lì jìn
one 's mind concealed more knowledge than could have been contained in five cartloads of books - xué fù wǔ chē
search for the origin and the outcome of the development of things - yuán shǐ jiàn zhōng