speak without restraint
In Chinese idioms, Pinyin is f à n à y á n à ol à n, which means to talk freely. From Xun Qing Lun.
The origin of Idioms
Song Sushi's Xunqing Lun said: "read Confucius family, observe its language articles, follow the rules, dare not speak up."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in speech. In Wang Tao's song bin Suo Hua · Li Yan Geng of the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "when I see all the famous people in the capital, I only drink, eat, play and drive them away all the time. I talk too much and I am conceited." Xie Fang of the Song Dynasty got the standard of articles: "broaden his mind and develop his ambition, but when you see the ease of writing, if you don't see the difficulty of writing, you will be able to speak up and write without embarrassment. Xu Jie's memories of two short stories about me: "sometimes we talk about our lofty plans and ideals."
Chinese PinYin : fàng yán gāo lùn
speak without restraint
one 's heart is like dead ashes -- utterly dissipated. xīn rú hán huī
heaped up earth becomes a mountain. tǔ rǎng xì liú