Tongue in cheek
Chinese idiom, Pinyin read D ò uch ú NH é sh é, which means still talking, show off eloquence. From jinhuazi zabian.
The origin of Idioms
In the volume of jinhuazi zabian written by Liu Chongyuan in the Southern Tang Dynasty, "Han 35, an old man, found an emissary in the same year, and learned to fight and talk more."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or object; used in speech
Tongue in cheek
having unusual bold and courage hero - dú dǎn yīng xióng
the beam breaking and the rafter falling -- the country being in a stage of ruin - dòng xiǔ cuī bēng