Dancing and opening
It is a Chinese idiom, w ǔ zh ǎ ozh ā ngy á in pinyin, which means that it originally describes the ferocity of beasts, but later it is often used to describe the ferocity. It comes from Appendix 2 of Dunhuang bianwenji · Confucius xiangtuoxiangwen book, the new edition of Confucius in trouble for children.
The origin of Idioms
In Appendix 2 of Dunhuang bianwenji Confucius xiangtuoxiangwen book, a new edition of Confucius who is in trouble for children, it is said that "the fish lives in the river and lake for three days, and the dragon lives in the river and lake for three days."
Idiom usage
All kinds of monsters are dancing their claws and teeth; a thousand kinds of strange birds have their own feathers and wings. Ling Mengchu, Ming Dynasty
Dancing and opening
Strange shape and strange system - guǐ xíng qí zhì
bear down on one with the weight of mount taishan - tài shān yā dǐng
The way is far and the way is good - dào yuǎn zhī jì,shì wěi zhī xián
have succumbed to the influence of many cups - jiǔ hān ěr shú