oversupply
Oversupply, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ō nggu ò y ú Qi ú, meaning to produce superfluous, unnecessary things or emotions. It comes from the history of livelihood theory.
Analysis of Idioms
Supply exceeds demand
The origin of Idioms
In Liang Qichao's a brief history of the evolution of livelihood theory in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "if the supply exceeds the demand, the price will fall."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate; used of people or goods. And it's also a way to find the market. Chapter 7 of Sun Yat Sen's psychological construction (Sun Wenxue Shuo) some enterprises blindly put into production, resulting in overstocking of products and oversupply of products, but some enterprises' products are in short supply. This situation must be changed quickly. once the market is opened, the price will drop sharply. Ji Xianlin's tragedy of the lonely path: "I have too many feelings, and the supply always exceeds the demand."
oversupply
A cup in a shadow and a snake in a bow - bēi yǐng shé gōng
Simple words and abundant meanings - yán jiǎn yì fēng
despise the poor and curry favour with the rich - xián pín ài fù
two tigers cannot live on the same mountain - guó wú èr jūn
explain profound theories in simple language - shēn rù qiǎn chū