freely
Wang yangwanwan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w à ngy á NGD à s à, which means articles, speech, calligraphy, etc. are bold and unrestrained. It comes from Han Yu's biography in the book of the new Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Describe the article, speech, calligraphy and other bold and unrestrained momentum, natural and unrestrained. It's the same as "being reckless".
The origin of Idioms
"Han Yu's biography of the new book of the Tang Dynasty:" when he got it, he was pure and upright. He published Chen's words, focused on other things, and wantonly wanted it. He could not help covering the saints. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
freely
the arrow is fitted to the string - shǐ zài xián shàng
The duck is short and the crane is long - fú duǎn hè cháng
people jostle each other , talking and laughing - yǔ xiào xuān hū
Ascending mountains to pick pearls - shēng shān cǎi zhū
serve the country with heart and soul - chì xīn bào guó