When the wood is divided, the horse opens three times and stops. The left and right hooves are bowed and lost. What are the idioms of these words?

To the point

The horse stumbles

Three points into the wood rù mù sān fēn

[Explanation] This refers to the vigorous and powerful calligraphy strokes. The post-metaphor has a thorough insight; the discussion is profound.

[Quotation] Zhang Huaiguan of the Tang Dynasty's "Shujuan": "When the Emperor of Jin Dynasty offered sacrifices to the northern suburbs; he updated the edition; workers whittled it; his pen penetrated the wood three-thirds."

[Correct pronunciation] Three ; Cannot be read as "shān".

[Distinguish form] Enter; cannot write "人".

[Similar meaning] Powerful to see through the back of the paper, Iron painted silver hook

[Antonym] A glimpse of something

[Usage] Used as a compliment. A word used to praise others or make profound comments. Generally used as predicate, attributive, adverbial and complement.

[Structure] More formal.

[Example] Some of Lu Xun's essays clearly revealed the ugly face of the Kuomintang reactionaries.

[English translation] written in a powerful hand

Open the bow left and right zuǒ Yòu kāi gōng

[Explanation] Both hands can draw the bow and shoot arrows. It describes slapping someone alternately with both hands; it also describes pulling away to both sides.

[Quotation] Bai Renfu of the Yuan Dynasty "Wu Tong Yu": "I draw bows on the left and right; I have eighteen kinds of martial arts; I can't master them all."

[Antonym] The left branch is weak and the right is weak

[Usage] Generally used as predicate, object, and adverbial.

[Structure] Subject-predicate formula.

[Analysis] ~ and "double-pronged approach" both have the meaning of "carrying out two aspects at the same time". But ~ emphasizes on the meaning of being able to carry out several aspects or "can operate with both hands"; "two-pronged approach" focuses on "carrying out two things at the same time" or "taking two measures" for the same purpose.

[Example] She holds two guns; ~; always hits the mark; known as the sharpshooter.