loquacious
Many words, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Du ō y á NDU ō y ǔ, which means to describe talking too much, nagging. From the outlaws of the marsh.
The origin of Idioms
The sixth chapter of outlaws of the Marsh: "Lu Junyi said:" what can your wife save! It's better to believe what it has than to believe what it doesn't have. Since ancient times, when a teacher comes to disaster, he will master good or bad. Now that I've made up my mind, you can't talk much. "
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, object, adverbial; used in speech
Analysis of Idioms
The opposite of silence
loquacious
holding a high official post , governing many places and possessing enormous wealth - fù miàn bǎi chéng
flowers blooming like a piece of brocade - fán huā sì jǐn
I'm in a hurry and I'm in a hurry - shén chí lì kùn
as incompatible as ice and charcoal - bīng tàn bù tóu
have tremendous courage and wisdom - dà zhì dà yǒng
Zhiyuan has a heavy responsibility - zhì yuǎn rèn zhàng