unintelligible
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù zh ī Su ǒ y á n, which means that the content of speech is confusing and incomprehensible. It comes from the biography of Zhuge Liang.
Analysis of Idioms
[antonym] one board with three eyes
The origin of Idioms
"The history of the Three Kingdoms · Shu Shu · biography of Zhuge Liang" says: "I am very grateful for your kindness. Now I should stay away from you, and I don't know what to say."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, object; often used in letters, etc. Example: the public is superior to the people, but the people are short, so they can't be heard. A new account of the world political affairs by Liu Yiqing in the Southern Song Dynasty
unintelligible
horses and oxen kept in the same stable - niú jì tóng zào
individual thinking is as varied as individual looks - rén xīn rú miàn
impart knowledge and solve doubts - shòu yè jiě huò
Light soldiers and sharp soldiers - qīng zú ruì bīng
failure to put things away properly is inviting theft - màn cáng huì dào