praise a person before everybody
Fengrenshuxiang, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f é NgR é nshu à Xi à ng, meaning metaphor everywhere for someone or something boast, say good things. It comes from Yang Jingzhi's a gift to Xiang Si.
The origin of Idioms
Yang Jingzhi, Tang Dynasty, wrote in his "gift to Xiang Si" that "poetry is always good everywhere, and the standard is too good for poetry. All my life, I don't understand the Tibetan people's kindness. I've met people everywhere
Idiom usage
Feiya went to every village again. She met people and talked to each other. She was worried about her words and kept on talking. She ran for a month in a row. The second chapter of "Eastern European heroines" by Lady Lingnan in the Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
During the Tang Dynasty, Xiang Si, a young man in Jiangdong, was not well-known when he took the HKCEE. Others showed Yang Jingzhi his papers. Yang especially likes to write poems, "several times I see that poems are excellent, and the standard is too poetic. I don't understand the kindness of Tibetans in my life, and I like to talk about things everywhere." Before long, he was admitted to Chang'an
Chinese PinYin : féng rén shuō xiàng
praise a person before everybody
make up a deficiency by the surplus. jué cháng bǔ duǎn
a swarm of people running after unwholesome things. rú yǐ fù shān