Obscure words and sentences
Shibuya, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ì Z ì s è J ù, which means obscure words, words and obscure sentences. It comes from Xiao Ting Za Lu Shi Wen se ti.
The origin of Idioms
"In his new book of Tang Dynasty, it's easy to use obscure words and sentences to make people read it. It's hard to be frank."
Idiom usage
It is used as subject, object and attribute; it refers to an obscure sentence.
Examples
Or Jing is a kind of secluded and astringent sentence, which is used to frighten the common people, to protect the vitality of nature, to cover the place of talented people, and to be strict in discipline. "Fu Chen you Ming Tai Shou Shu" by Zeng Guofan in Qing Dynasty
Obscure words and sentences
Playing with the year and the moon - wán suì yī yuè
wander without a fixed dwelling - píng piāo péng zhuàn
make obeisance and perform the rites of courtesy - kē tóu lǐ bài