Yan Ran
Yan Ran ziruo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y à NR á NZ à Ru à, which means calm and stable appearance. It comes from the biography of Sun Jian in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
Idiom explanation
Yan Ran: calm and stable appearance; ziruo: unchangeable normality. It describes being quiet in a state of tension.
The origin of Idioms
According to the chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, Wu Zhi and Sun Jian Zhuan, "Zhang Zi, the prefect of Nanyang, heard that the army had arrived, and Yan Ran was as good as he could be."
Idiom usage
He Chong biography of the book of Jin: all the people around him are uneasy about it, and they are full of self-confidence. So it's Wu dun. Left East Sea King literature, find dunbai, tired moved in the book minister.
Yan Ran
Every inch of the earth is equal to the sky - cùn dì chǐ tiān
bringing up a tiger to injure oneself - yǎng hǔ shāng shēn
Success is king, failure is thief - chéng zé wéi wáng,bài zé wéi zéi
not a hair 's breadth in between - jiàn bù róng fà