Dancing
Dancing, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ú D ǎ OSH ǒ UW ǔ, meaning dancing. Dance with your hands and jump with your feet. It's the way you look when you're at the height of joy. It comes from the ode of shooting down flying geese in the sage garden written by Lu Zhi of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Zhi of the Tang Dynasty wrote in his ode to shooting down flying geese in the sage Garden: "those who hear of it dance with their feet, while those who see it are frightened and alert."
Analysis of Idioms
Dancing
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, attributive and adverbial; it is used as an example to show that the hearer often works backward and wants to escape from sleep, while the reciter dances unconsciously. Pu Songling's strange stories from a lonely studio Miao Sheng in Qing Dynasty
Dancing
broaden sources of income and reduce expenditure - kāi yuán jié liú
oral teaching that inspires true understanding within - kǒu chuán xīn shòu
one 's voice is like a great bell - shēng rú hóng zhōng