be skilled in debate
Eloquence, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is n é ngy á nqi à Obi à n, which means to describe eloquence and eloquence. It comes from Qi Ying Bu written by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The first part of Qi Ying Bu written by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty: "in the battle of Qicai Lingbi, King Xiang sent an envoy to collect Buhui, and there was a gap between Buhui and dragon. He said that he was ill and could not go there. If he had a man of eloquence, he said that he would surrender and Zongxiang Wang would return The king of broken items must carry on. "
Idiom usage
In Ye Shengtao's on the bridge, it is said that "Bu is very thin, which is the mark of eloquence."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: eloquent antonym: clumsy
be skilled in debate
be lithe and yet powerfully built - hǔ tǐ xióng yāo
reject saying because the speaker is what or who he is - yǐ rén fèi yán