spout eloquent speeches
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is t ā ot ā ob ù Ju é, meaning like flowing water general uninterrupted, many adjectives, said endless. It comes from the debate on Zou Wan, the legacy of Kaiyuan Tianbao.
Analysis of Idioms
A steady stream of synonyms and antonyms
The origin of Idioms
In Wang Renyu's argument on Zou Wan, a legacy of Kaiyuan Tianbao in the late Zhou Dynasty, it is said that "Zhang Jiuling is good at talking about it. Every time he talks about the scriptures with his guests, he talks endlessly, as follows: Osaka Zou Wan."
Idiom usage
They are used as adverbials and attributives. (1) Chapter 3 of Jin Ping Mei's Ci Hua: "but when you meet someone, you can sit or stand up and talk like a river." (2) Chapter 168 of Zhang Chunfan's Nine Tailed turtle in Qing Dynasty: Chen Gongbao actually talked with qiugu once. Seeing qiugu's eloquence, he could not help but feel strange. (3) the 20th chapter of Chen Chen's "Water Margin" in Qing Dynasty: Wang Bao presented li Liu's pass, and there was no one to stop him. (4) Chapter 32 of "Dangkou Zhi" written by Yu Wanchun in Qing Dynasty: "when Zhang Jiyi asked about the method of Cao Zhou's capture, Cheng Ying talked over and over again. He was so eloquent that Zhang Jiyi didn't understand it at all. He even claimed that he was right."
spout eloquent speeches
the drunken singing and the usual dancing - hān gē zuì wǔ
be overwhelmed by an unexpected favour - bèi chǒng ruò jīng
clarion call to awaken the public to lurking danger by writing at the top of one 's voice - dà shēng jí hū
a capable man pretends to be stupid in order to avoid jealousy - dà qiǎo ruò zhuō
the water is deep and the fire is hot - shuǐ shēn huǒ rè
Fire the dragon and cook the Phoenix - pào lóng pēng fèng