1, the basic interpretation: Chinese idioms, which mean to describe famous articles and also refer to famous writers, are from Biography of King Xun in the Book of Jin and Biography of King Xun in the Book of Jin, which makes people dream of a large sum of money and think it is a big deal.
2, idiom usage: as a predicate, adverbial, metaphor for great writers and calligraphers. The words are as bright as jade and the pen is as big as a rafter. On the Trend and Influence of Novels by Tao Qing. The position of predicate verbs is generally after the subject, and commonly used verbs and adjectives act as predicate verbs. Verbs are mainly divided into two categories according to their functions, one is predicate verbs and the other is non-predicate verbs.
3. Idiom allusion: Wang Jian, the champion of the Eastern Jin Dynasty, was witty and brave since he was a child and was very good at writing prose and poetry. At the age of twenty, he was hired as the master book by Dafu Huan Wen. On one occasion, in order to test the courage of the king of Chu to be martyred, Huan Wen rode his horse from the backyard to the hall at a meeting of the Fu family. The aides were so scared that they lost their fingers and fled everywhere. Only Wang Jian remained calm and sat still. Huan Wen lamented that those who can still sit still in the face of running horses will be blackheads in the future.