A rich and righteous speech
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í y ì f é IC í, meaning that the content is poor and the sentences are long. It comes from Wen Xin Diao Long Feng Gu by Liang and Liu Xie of the Southern Dynasty.
source
Liang Liuxie's Wenxindiaolong Fenggu in the Southern Dynasty said, "chuizi is strong but hard to move, and jiexiangcong is not stagnant, so is the strength of Fenggu. If the words are complex and unorthodox, there is no sign of bones. "
interpretation
The content is poor and the sentences are long.
Examples
Fan Wenlan, Cai Meibiao, et al. Chapter 5, section 3, Part II of general history of China: "the school of parallel prose, represented by song Yanzhi, lays particular stress on diction. It is not antithesis but not sentence. It is not using things but speech. Its form is very beautiful, but it is also a common fault of this school of parallel prose, which is lengthy and piled up with little meaning and much language (the so-called" barren words ")
data
Idiom structure: combined form: generation time: ancient times
A rich and righteous speech
search for an opening for oneself by all possible means - zuān tiān rù dì
birds of a feather flock together - rén yǐ qún fēn
Equal courtesy and equal respect - děng lǐ xiāng kàng
abuse one 's power and take bribes - zhāo quán nà lù