spread like wildfire
The Chinese idiom, w ú J ì ng é RZ ǒ u in pinyin, means that he often comes from the door of the most beloved sage by means of Yu Liangcai. From the book on Sheng Xiaozhang.
Idiom explanation
It's just like walking in the wind. Yu Liangcai is often regarded as a sage. It's the same as "walking without a leg.".
The origin of Idioms
Han Kong Rong's book on Sheng Xiaozhang says, "if a pearl or jade comes without a shin, it's better for people."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: walking without a leg
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Examples
The first chapter is the same sentence. It is faster than pearls. The epitaph of Yuan cemetery written by Bai Juyi in Tang Dynasty
Idioms and allusions
The book is written by Liu Xiang of Han Dynasty.
In the spring and Autumn period, Zhao Jianzi, a doctor of the state of Jin, was enjoying himself on the Bank of the Yellow River. He sighed: "how can we get virtuous people and live with them all the time?" The rower, Gu Cheng, knelt down in front of him and said, "the jade has no feet. It's thousands of miles away. The reason why people can come here is that people like it. Now virtuous people have legs, but they don't come to you. That's why you don't like them Zhao Jianzi said: "my family has thousands of door-to-door guests. If we don't have enough food tomorrow morning, we will go to the market to collect taxes tonight; if we don't have enough food at night, we will go to the market to collect taxes in the morning. How can I say I don't like it? "
Gu Cheng, the rower, replied, "the geese can fly far and high by the six stems on their wings, which are, to put it bluntly, their wings. As for the fur on the back and under the belly, it is soft and short. If you remove one, it will not reduce the flying height of geese; if you add one, it will not increase the flying height of geese. I don't know how many of the thousands of guests in your family are winged and how many are light hairy? "
"Pearls and jades have no feet", "so they can come" is refined as an allusion "spread like wildfire". By the end of Han Dynasty, Confucius Rong's on Sheng Kao Zhang Shu had become the truth of this book.
Chinese PinYin : wú jìng ér zǒu
spread like wildfire
long-drawn and tedious documents. lián piān lěi dú
A gathering of geese and ducks. fú jū yàn jù
descending to earth and worldly pleasures , play through life. yóu xì rén jiān
the day is not too distant when. wéi qī bù yuǎn