mere talk
To sum up, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is B ù g ā nzh ī t á n, which means groundless words. From notes of jiaocuixuan by Shen Tao of Qing Dynasty.
explain
A word that has no basis.
source
The fourth volume of notes of jiaocuixuan written by Shen Tao in Qing Dynasty: "there is a surname of Xi in Yangzhou. As the saying goes, the surname of Xi is the first in history, and it's homonymous with death, so it's changed to Xi. It's not at all
For example, those who engraved the novel Journey to the West in the early Qing Dynasty took Yu Ji's preface to Changchun Zhenren's journey to the West as the first one. The 17th chapter of Lu Xun's a brief history of Chinese Novels
grammar
To be formal; to be an object; to be derogatory
Analysis of Idioms
Nonsense of synonyms
The evidence of antonym
mere talk
a hoary head does research in the classics -- an aged person still learns - hào shǒu qióng jīng
a fish leaping over the dragon gate -- have passed a competitive examination - yú shēng lóng mén
Once the power is in hand, the order will be executed - yī zhāo quán zài shǒu,biàn bǎ lìng lái xí