stuff and nonsense
Needless to say, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is B ù J ī ngzh ī t á n, which means absurd and groundless words. It often refers to the principles, rules, etc. It comes from the biographies of Mencius and Xunqing in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
Sima Qian's biography of Mencius and Xunqing in historical records in the Western Han Dynasty: "its language is hongdabujing." In Jin Yanghu's book of commandments, "there is no preaching, no talking about scriptures, no hearing of words of repute."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. The description is groundless. Generally used as subject and object. In the west of yun'an County, there is Xiaotang river. According to the local custom, this river dragon is related to yun'an River Dragon. (Volume 4 of sun Guangxian's BEIMENG Suoyan, Song Dynasty)
Analysis of Idioms
The opposite is true and well founded
stuff and nonsense
great literature and classical works - gāo wén diǎn cè
be courteous to the wise and condescending to scholars - qiān gōng xià shì
feel indebted as if it were received in person - gǎn tóng shēn shòu