Tianma Xingkong literally means a horse running at great speed, as if it is flying in the air. It often refers to being bold and unrestrained (mostly used in evaluating writing, painting, calligraphy, etc.); it also refers to impetuous people. , not practical; also describes speaking and doing things without boundaries.
Tianma: The sweat-blooded horse obtained from Dawan (the name of the ancient Western Region country) during the reign of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty is called Tianma, which means divine horse. See "Historical Records: Biography of Dawan". Xingkong: describes a galloping horse, like flying in the sky.
The pinyin of Tianma Xingkong is tiān mǎ xíng kōng. It is an idiom structured in the subject-predicate form. In the sentence, more predicates, adverbials, and attributives are used. Sentence reference: What is admirable is his unconstrained imagination, which makes the movie... We show a whole new world of alien life.
Extended information
The term Tianma Xingkong first came from the "Preface to the Collection of Sa Tianxi Poems" by Liu Tingzhen of the Yuan Dynasty. "The reason why it is deified and transcends others is almost like the Tianma Xingkong with extraordinary steps." Synonyms with similar semantics are:
① Swish freely, pronounced as huī sǎ zì rú, whirl: to wave a pen; wine: to sprinkle ink. Describes painting, writing, composing, and being able to use the pen as you please without being restricted. "Niehaihua" written by Zeng Pu in the Qing Dynasty: "My family gave me a pen dipped in ink; Jue Zhai picked up the pen and wrote more than a hundred words freely on the paper."
②The dragon and the phoenix dance, pronunciation It is lóng fēi fèng wǔ, which comes from describing the bold and majestic momentum. Song Su Shi's "Biao Zhong Guan Stele": "On the mountain of Tianmu, the sweet water flows out, and the dragons and phoenixes dance, gathering in Lin'an." Later, the calligraphy was described as powerful, lively and stretched.
③Unfettered, pronounced as wú jū wú shù, Jie: restriction, Jie: constraint. Describes freedom, no restrictions, and no restrictions. From Chapter 44 of "Journey to the West" by Wu Cheng'en in the Ming Dynasty: "Monks are unfettered; free and unrestrained."