Playing calligraphy
Playing calligraphy is a Chinese idiom, pronounced y ó UX à h à nm à, which means poems written with a playful attitude. From "Chunzhu Jiwen · Nanhai Songmei".
explain
[idiom]: playing calligraphy [Pinyin]: y ó UX à h à nm à [simplified spelling]: yxhm à [explanation]: refers to poems written with a game attitude. It's the same as "play with pen and ink".
allusion
[source]: Song · he Juan's "Chunzhu chronicle · Nanhai Songmei" says: "there are many scholars playing calligraphy in modern times, because of their high quality and extraordinary creativity, such as those made by Wei Zhongjiang of Jin Dynasty and Zhang Yong of Song Dynasty." [example]: when Tao Jinshi and Liu Xiaolian saw that the words were all from the kite to Song Xin, they were very interesting. Cold swallow in Pingshan Chapter 6
Discrimination of words
Grammar: used as predicate, object and attribute; used in composition, etc
Playing calligraphy
like nature itself -- highest quality - hún rán tiān chéng
a powerful and unconstrained style - tiān mǎ xíng kōng
as the arm directing the fingers -- command with ease as one wishes - rú bì shǐ zhǐ