Attached to the classical Chinese version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: Zhang, Shi Gongxian also. There was a long sound coming from the bow.
Attached to the vernacular version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: Zhang, tied with strings on the bow. The glyph takes the "bow" as the edge and the "long" as the edge.
Extended data
1, exaggeration: Rhetoric refers to describing things with exaggerated words to stimulate the imagination of listeners or readers and strengthen the power of what is said.
Zhu Ziqing's On the Truth: "As a result, the facts are blurred, exaggerated, distorted and even fabricated!"
2, panic: the heart is not calm, the action is hectic.
Chapter 4 of Liu Qing's Iron Wall: "Never estimate things too simply, so that you won't panic when you encounter great difficulties."
3. Paper: Paper (collectively)
Cao Yu's Sunrise Act II: "Don't you find any benefits in pen and ink?"
4. Stretch: Expand (something more abstract)
Sun Li's Reading an Essay: "The feelings it expresses and the truth it upholds can be imagined."
5, arrogance: (evil forces, evil spirits) rise; fierce
Wei Wei's "Oriental" Chapter 16 Part 4: "When the enemy saw that he had no bullets, his arrogance suddenly became arrogant."