farfetched
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Chu ā NZ á of ù Hu ì, which means to explain things that are unreasonable or irrelevant. It comes from Rong Zhai's continuation of writing: infinite theory of righteousness.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] far fetched and [antonym] well understood
The origin of Idioms
In Song Hongmai's Rong Zhai Xu Bi Yi Li Zhi Shuo infinite, Volume 2: "use is that those who know curiosity want to drill, attach and fix their own opinions."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning, which is the same as "far fetched". Zhu Ziqing's classic talks: spring and autumn three biographies No.6: but when explaining the Scriptures, they often chew word by word, and this chew, regardless of the context, will get together. Fan Wenlan's notes on the second edition of the first volume: "this volume adopts historical materials to avoid sticking to the old theory, but it also dares not to talk about it hastily, or to stick to it for novelty."
Chinese PinYin : chuān záo fù huì
farfetched
defy one 's superiors and start a rebellion. fàn shàng zuò luàn
deliberately exagerate so as to create a sensation. sǒng rén tīng wén