wag one's tongue too freely
It is a Chinese idiom.
Pinyin: X ì NK ǒ UK ā IH é
Explanation: it refers to saying things casually.
idiom
speak carelessly , rapidly , voluminously like the outflow of river water when the sluice gates are opened
Pinyin
xìnkǒukāihé
Citation explanation
This is a metaphor for saying things casually. The fourth fold of Lu zhailang by Guan Hanqing in Yuan Dynasty: "don't just open your mouth and shut your mouth. I don't want to ask for fish from trees." The third fold of the second volume of the romance of the Western Chamber written by Wang Shifu in Yuan Dynasty: "you should stop talking there. You shouldn't know it by mouth." Yuan · Xue angfu's "duanzhenghao · Gaoyin" divertimento: "tingwang left chatting and chatting, while Dagong Li opened his mouth freely." (Ming Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "Fisherman and woodcutter's gossips" is like a savage in the forest in the mountains, no honor, no shame, no pleasure, no pleasure, no restraint Chapter 39 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: "grandma in the village speaks freely."
Examples
When he was happy with what he said, he let it go.
Discrimination of words
Usage: used as predicate, object and adverbial; refers to casual utterance; used as predicate, object and adverbial; with derogatory meaning; refers to casual utterance.
wag one's tongue too freely
speak carelessly , rapidly , voluminously like the outflow of river water when the sluice gates are opened - xìn kǒu kāi hé
Win without pride, lose without despair - shèng bù jiāo,bài bù něi
Stop the boiling and increase the salary - zhǐ fèi yì xīn