ballyhoo
Big blow, a Chinese idiom, pronounced D à Chu à D à L é I, means that many musical instruments blow at the same time. The metaphor is widely publicized. From Li Chun Tang.
Analysis of Idioms
[near synonym] boast, exaggerate, boast and be ashamed of oneself. [antonym] be down-to-earth, realistic and consistent in words and deeds
The origin of Idioms
The fourth discount of Wang Shifu's Lichun hall in Yuan Dynasty: I give you 1000 taels of gold and 100 bottles of fragrant wine. I'll make a big boast in Lichun hall and make a happy feast.
Idiom usage
To brag about oneself is to brag about oneself. Chapter 40 of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty. (2) in the 50th chapter of Water Margin by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty, Wu xuezhe's two palms in a chain plan, song Gongming's three strikes at ZHUJIAZHUANG, many heroes drank until the evening.
Chinese PinYin : dà chuī dà léi
ballyhoo
praise a person before everybody. féng rén shuō xiàng
national economy and people 's livelihood. guó jì mín shēng
a vast territory with a sparse population. dì kuàng rén xī