valiant and heroic in bearing
Yingzisashuang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī ngz ī s à Shu ǎ ng, which means that a man is full of energy, high spirited and brave. It can also be said that women are full of vigor and vitality, and have a valiant temperament. It's from "a gift from Danqing to general Cao".
Idiom usage
Chen Qitong's "thousands of rivers and thousands of mountains" Scene 2: "Captain Wu, Li Fenglian and the propaganda team members who are wearing broadswords - Di Chong Shang."
The origin of Idioms
Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty, in his book "Danqing is a gift to general Cao", said that "Baogong, egong and Mao launched a valiant war."
valiant and heroic in bearing
Less courtesy, more satisfaction - lǐ qīng rén yì zhòng
sit idly by without lending a helping hand - zuò shī bù jiù