groundless talk
Fengyanfengyu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē ngy á NF ē ngy ǔ, which means unfounded words, mostly refers to ignorance, doubt and speculation. It also refers to the private discussion of secret legends. From Yi Lin.
Analysis of Idioms
Slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander, slander
The origin of Idioms
Jiao Gan's Yilin in Han Dynasty: "Chinese language is full of wind and language, but it is confused and wrong."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. Example: Yang Shuo's fishing flute: "Song Fuyi will help her push and grind the mill and do some hard work when she is free, which will inevitably cause some trouble." My mother has endured a lot of blame for her tall, plump chest and thick feet. Chapter one of Feng Deying's bitter cauliflower, chapter two of Chongzhen's Jin Ping Mei, says, "who knows, when she was drinking, the woman was just talking about it. Later, she wanted to give Wu Song half of her drink to eat. 」
groundless talk
No double blessing, no single disaster - fú wú shuāng zhì,huò bù dān xíng
the people are plunged into an abyss of misery - cāng shēng tú tàn
willing to help but unable to do so - ài mò néng zhù
the means of the people have been used up - mín qióng cái kuì