Kua Qiang Dao Hui
Kua Qiang Dao Hui is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Ku ā Qi á NGD à Ohu ì, which means boasting about one's ability and ability. It comes from the song of Zhu Luqu, Hou Heqing, a Taoist of the world, written by Zhang yanghao of Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object
Examples
He boasted and strengthened the way, and he would use his martial arts to show my new father who was kind and righteous.
Analysis of Idioms
Kua Qiang, Shuo Hui
The origin of Idioms
"Brother Xiu likes to boast that he can speak well, but he can't do it without sticking to the bone and sticking to the skin."
Idiom explanation
Yes. Boast of your ability and ability. Also known as "Kua Qiang Shuo Hui".
Kua Qiang Dao Hui
gain victory with unstained swords - bīng wèi xuě rèn
Children in the mountains and stones in the rocks - shān tóng shí làn
People don't know, ghosts don't know - rén bù zhī,guǐ bù jué