1, Jiang Lang exhausted: This is an idiom in Chinese. It was first published by Liang Zhongrong in the Southern Dynasties. This idiom originally meant that Jiang Yan had no literary fame, and there were no good sentences in his poems and songs in his later years. Later, it is often used to describe the decline of talent.
2. Turning the corner: an idiom in China, pronounced Hu à xi m ? n w é i y í, means turning the corner. From Ode to Ping Man.
3. Unbelievable: Chinese idiom, Pinyin: fěi yí suǒ sī, describes people's thoughts, words, skills, things, etc. These are bizarre and extraordinary, which means that their behavior is bizarre and unusual, beyond the imagination of ordinary people. From Zhouyi Huan.
4, tottering: China idiom, pinyin is yáo yáo yüZhuì, very dangerous, will soon fall, or unstable, will soon collapse. From Romance of the Three Kingdoms.
5, lifelike: Chinese idioms, pinyin for xǔ xǔ rú shēng, usually refers to the vivid and lifelike artistic images in painting and sculpture, just like living. From Zhuangzi's Homogeneous Matter Theory.
6. The mountain is high and the water is long: China idiom, pinyin is shān gāo shuǐ cháng, towering like a mountain and flowing like water. The original metaphor is that a person's demeanor or reputation exists forever like a mountain, and the later metaphor is profound. From Wang Fu.
Jiang Lang is a synonym.
Jiang Lang's talent is similar to idioms such as "seeking wisdom as much as possible" and "running out of water", but they are different. As much wisdom as possible means that both intelligence and ability have been exhausted. Being poor in skills means being poor in skills, and the metaphor is extremely limited. Jiang Lang's exhaustion of talents and skills means that he has exhausted his talents or skills. The difference between them is that Jiang Lang was originally very talented, but later he was abandoned, resulting in the exhaustion of literary thinking. He emphasized that his original skills were very limited, his moves were exhausted and he could only fail in the end.