to a proper extent
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Qi à R ú Q í f è n, which means that one can't do too much when speaking, and the other means that one can do things properly. It comes from chapter 108 of Qiludeng written by Li Lvyuan in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In Chapter 108 of the Qiludeng written by Li Lvyuan in Qing Dynasty, it is Yan Zhongduan's discretion to divide the rewards into different levels. He is happy with the appropriate amount
Idiom usage
Lu Xun's on retranslation of lacy Literature: "the translation is not as good as the original, even it is difficult to translate Chinese Cantonese into Beijing or from Beijing to Shanghai."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms just right, not at all, orderly antonyms far away from the topic, far away, disorderly
to a proper extent
investigate the hidden mysteries of things - tàn yōu suǒ yǐn
The person who tied the bell is the only way to solve the problem - jiě líng hái xū xì líng rén
A grain of rice is a bundle of wages - lì mǐ shù xīn