Open mouth
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ū Zu ǐ L ü è sh é, meaning rhetoric. It's from Jin Ping Mei CI Hua written by Xiaosheng, Lanling, Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
To be a predicate or an object
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Rhetoric
The origin of Idioms
The 61st chapter of Jin Ping Mei CI Hua by Lanling Xiaosheng of Ming Dynasty: "who listened to your empty mouth? I'll die tomorrow, and you won't give up on me, will you
Idiom explanation
It's a metaphor for rhetoric.
Open mouth
We are anxious about gain and loss - guǐ dé guǐ shī
Zhuang Sheng dreams of butterfly - zhuāng shēng mèng dié
decision making through operations research - yùn chóu jiàn cè
encroach upon reputation and offend justice - gàn míng fàn yì