in high spirits
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ì Q ì f ē iy á n, which means you are still in high spirits. It is used to describe spirited and heroic. It's from Shen Luan Jiao.
The origin of Idioms
Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty wrote: "I think Hualang's spirit is getting stronger and stronger, and he will soon be honored."
Idiom usage
As a predicate, attribute, adverbial; used in dealing with affairs. Chapter 48 of Hua Yue Chen: "on the day of graduation, everyone is in high spirits." Li Guang's "friend Liu Jingsheng continues to study Baoding poetry to send it": "high spirited, good skill, encourage the line, do not hesitate."
in high spirits
confirmed habits are hard to get rid of - jī zhòng bù fǎn
When a tiger has three sons, there must be one - hǔ shēng sān zì,bì yǒu yī biāo
Pay equal attention to words and ears - kǒu ěr bìng zhòng