Exaggeration
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is y ì y á nx ū m ě I, meaning too much, not in line with the actual beauty. It comes from Fang Bao's book of songs on temple of Qing Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It is too much to be praised as beautiful.
The origin of Idioms
Fang Bao of the Qing Dynasty wrote: "the ancients should be sincere in their affairs, and dare not exaggerate, so as to nourish the future generations."
Idiom usage
To act as a predicate or attributive
Examples
Yin Qian: "in this era when vulgar and shallow values prevail, all coarse, vulgar and false negative writing must be a popular writing mode. After reading the works, they often do evil for several days, and often cater to the market in this way. Many critics have made great contributions to the works, which not only hurt the readers, but also hit their confidence The readers deeply experience the complex feeling of being cheated by critics and teased by writers. " (selected from Yin Qian's a novel that can make people get spiritual maturity)
Exaggeration
greatly discerning and apprehending - dà chè dà wù
complicated and difficult to deal with - pán gēn cuò jié