Wang Yangxuan pronunciation: wāng yáng zì sì.
Wangyangwansi, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is wāng yáng zì sì, which means to describe articles, speeches, calligraphy, etc. that are bold and unrestrained. From "Historical Records: Biography of Laozi, Li Erzhuang, Zhou Shenbu Hui".
Origin of the idiom:
Sima Qian of the Western Han Dynasty's "Historical Records: Biography of Laozi, Li Erzhuang and Zhou Shenbu": "He said that he was willing to do whatever he wanted in foreign countries to suit himself, so he could not be used by princes and nobles. ”
Liu Zongyuan of the Tang Dynasty wrote: “Whenever you write, you should remove all the extravagant decorations and use them to suit your own needs.”
Ming Dynasty Gui Youguang's "Books with Pan Zishi": "It is a common problem in this world to listen to his words and speak freely, but in fact he has no compromise."
Explanation:
< p>Wang Yang: Describes the article as powerful and profound in meaning. Si: indulgence. It describes a person's bearing or an article's majesty, boldness and ease.Sentences:
1. Poems are boundless in the sea of ??suffering. Successful life is like a sea, and the ocean is unbridled. He excitedly spread out the manuscript paper, picked up the pen and wrote the title of the novel, and then started writing with abandon.
2. It lies drunk in the spring breeze, full of passion and unbridled. The vast ocean spreads freely and is used to suit oneself.
3. Although the article is short and concise, it is unbridled, as plain as water but profound in meaning; every sentence is true, every word is precious, and it is both informative and interesting, reflecting the sincerity of this hundred-year-old scholar. . It is straightforward and unrestrained; it is melancholy, clear and thought-provoking.
Methods for learning idioms:
The first method is to understand the origin of idioms
Some come from historical celebrities, some come from ancient books, ancient cultural classics, such as In "The Analects of Confucius", "the tiger rushes into the river", "make mistakes without correcting", "review the past and learn the new"; in "The Tao Te Ching", "the best is like water", in "Zhuangzi", "the cook eats the cow", "the movement of pounds becomes the wind", "Eastern imitation".
Some come from historical classics, such as "Historical Records", "Hanshu", "Warring States Policy", "Zuo Zhuan", etc. Finding the source can not only understand the interest behind the idiom, making the idiom more lively and interesting, but also give the content of the idiom a foundation, that is, the small idiom and the big principles.
The second method is to identify the objects of its use
Some objects can only be used to describe people, such as "good and bad", which describes both good and bad people. To describe general things, you can only use " "The flaws and virtues meet each other." Among the descriptions of people, some members have specific modification objects, such as "cardamom age", which is used to describe a woman who is thirteen or fourteen years old. It cannot be used to describe men. "Lying at night and eating at night" means busy with government affairs and cannot be used to mean busy with other things.