stuff and nonsense
Needless to say, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is B ù J ī ngzh ī Shu ō, which means absurd and groundless words. The source is "moving the temple to discuss".
The origin of Idioms
Wu Zhen of Tang Dynasty wrote in his treatise on moving Temples: "if he cut off the casual saying of Han Dynasty, he would collect the long-standing articles of yin and Zhou Dynasty, and follow the rule of moving when his relatives are exhausted, so as to make it a permanent custom for thousands of generations."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: casual words
Idiom usage
As the subject and object, the adjective is groundless
Examples
Since Qin Dynasty, the universe has been unified and magnified More aid Fu Rui said casually, fooling Qianshou. The first chapter of Zou Rong's Revolutionary Army in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : bù jīng zhī shuō
stuff and nonsense
A hundred beaks are hard to say. bǎi huì nán cí
swallow anything and everything. jiān shōu bìng lù