keep on repeating at great length
Li á nzh ā NGL è ID ú, a Chinese idiom, means too much space and long diction. From stone · Hecai.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Zhiji of Tang Dynasty wrote in his book Shi Tong he Cai: "so he took the lead in his hands, and most of them had no comprehensive knowledge of Quan; there were many articles, but few words of euphemism."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: a long list
Antonym: concise and comprehensive
Idiom usage
It is used as attributive and adverbial.
Examples
Qing, there is a scholar Yan, to grass grass sparse cheap, not for luring, not for fear of disaster, in a series of articles, anti theory today and minister. Hou Fangyu's Nansheng shice 2 in Qing Dynasty
keep on repeating at great length
have no sense of gratitude and justice - gū ēn bèi yì