Walking idioms

The idiom of walking is: take a quick look at the flowers, brush off the snake, be desperate, start a prairie fire, take risks, sit on the table and take medicine, and walk away.

The best policy is to get more than one bargained for. Take office, climb the eaves and walls, walk north and south, walk the dead, birds and animals, fly sand and stones, and make thirty-six plans. Take the best policy, run away, run around, walk mountains and cry stones, and write poems.

Walking at horse races, eating to prevent choking, walking to prevent falling, walking in a hurry in the afternoon, standing with fists, walking with arms, flying along the wall, walking around and looking around.

Let the cat out of the bag, wander around, go skating, call eagles and running dogs, take medicine in Osaka, fly away, walk rabbits, fly away, stand on fists and walk on arms, rabbits fall, bump around, walk bones, walk bones.

Eagles run dogs, walk on the eaves of walls, walk on horses, walk away, children walk, fly to the phoenix, scurry away from the sky with medals, startle dragons and snakes, peck at beams and columns, and keep mosquitoes away from cattle and sheep.

Those who walk on the platform, climb over the eaves, have no choice but to let the cat out of the bag, go with the wind, fly away, walk is the best policy, tell each other, fly needles, set fists, walk on horses and fly books.

Walking on a mountain and weeping over a stone, writing a pen, walking a corpse, flying a horse, fighting a chicken, walking a horse, clamoring for fame, walking a fox, walking stones and flying sand, flying eagles and running dogs, flying eagles and walking jade in Jin Fei, walking sand and walking stones, writing logic, abandoning cars and walking forests, peddling husbands and pawns, walking jade, and so on.