compete to produce length articles with flowery language
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Ku ā Du ō D ò um í, which means to write a long article, boast and win with gorgeous rhetoric, and then also refers to the vivid, luxurious and luxurious competition. It comes from the preface to send Chen Xiucai to Tong by Han Yu of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom usage
After the Song Dynasty, scholars were fond of boasting and fighting.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu of Tang Dynasty wrote a preface to send Chen Xiucai to Tongxu: "reading is for learning, and Zuan Yan is for writing. It is not to boast and fight."
Idiom explanation
Boast: boast; fight: competition; extravagance: luxury. Originally, it refers to writing articles with a lot of space and rhetoric to boast and win. Later, it also refers to lively, luxurious and luxurious competitions.
compete to produce length articles with flowery language
all over the mountains and plains - mǎn shān biàn yě
take up and adopt others ' thoughts instead of using one 's own - shí rén yá huì
wander without a fixed dwelling - píng piāo péng zhuàn