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The Chinese idiom is w è NSH í D à ob à I. It means to know a lot or to be eloquent. It comes from the story of Li Cuilian.
Idioms and allusions
Source: in the story of Li Cuilian in Pingshan Hall of the Qing Dynasty written by Hong Hui of the Ming Dynasty: "it's just a matter of speaking more quickly. If you want to talk to people, you can say something, you can say something, you can say something, you can answer ten questions, you can ask ten questions."
Discrimination of words
words whose meaning is similar
have a ready tongue
Degree of common use: Average
Emotional color: commendatory words
Grammatical usage: used as predicate, attribute and object; used for speaking, etc. idiom structure: contractive
Time of birth: ancient times
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breakfast in the morning and dinner in the evening -- said of one who has nothing to do but eating - zhāo yōng xī sūn
be completely indifferent to others ' words - fēng chuī mǎ ěr
surrendering oneself to the cannibal bandits to substitute for his younger brother they captured , stating that he himself is fatter - xiōng féi dì shòu