stretch the truth
Therefore, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ù sh è NQ í C í, which means to speak deliberately exaggerated, divorced from the facts. It comes from Huang junzai's the traitor of the Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As a predicate; used in speech, etc
The origin of Idioms
Huang junzai of the Qing Dynasty wrote in "the traitor in the golden pot and langmo": "to cover up the detectives used by our army, he led hundreds of money to send out the rogue people, hearsay, or even even his own words, in order to intimidate the soldiers and shake people's hearts."
Idiom explanation
It refers to the deliberate exaggeration of words and the separation from facts.
Chinese PinYin : gù shèn qí cí
stretch the truth
One's reputation is distinguished.. zī shēng wàng zhòng
full of difficult and unpronounceable words. jié qū áo yá
Three days after parting, we should treat each other with new eyes. shì bié sān rì,dāng guā mù xiāng dài