dull remarks
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is y ǔ B ù J ī NgR è n, which means that the sentence is plain, there is no shocking place. It's from a brief account of the situation on the river.
Idiom explanation
Language: speech, also refers to the text.
The origin of Idioms
Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty wrote a short poem about the value of water on the river and the potential of the sea: "it's not surprising to say good sentences for human nature."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as predicate, attribute; refers to the plain sentence. In the preface to the collection of Su pingzhong's works written by Liu Ji of Ming Dynasty, "the words are not surprising, but the meaning is from the beginning, and the reason is clear enough to capture it."
dull remarks
warning taken from the overturned cart in front - qián chē zhī jiàn
be ashamed of one's inadequacy while envying another's competence - cán fú qǐ hè
take advantage of an opportunity that comes one 's way - jiàn jī ér xíng
Against the public to the private - bèi gōng xiàng sī