Add to the sauce
Add oil to sauce, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji à y ó UTI à NJI à ng, meaning to exaggerate or exaggerate the need to add to the original narrative or speaking without content. It comes from the biography of xujigong in the rest of Keng's life in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
What if the villain told Zhang Jun all the more?
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: add leaves and twigs, add oil and vinegar, add oil and vinegar antonym: seek truth from facts
The origin of Idioms
The 97th chapter of the biography of xujigong in the rest of Keng's life in the Qing Dynasty: "the Empress Dowager wants to speak, and her tears are rolling. She feels a sour and bitter suffocation in her heart, so she can't speak a word. It happened that Zhou Xuan wanted to add oil to the sauce. He said how the emperor was unfilial and how he revoked the Yizhi. "
Idiom explanation
For the need of exaggeration or exaggeration, we should add something that we didn't have before in narration or speech. It's the same as "adding oil and vinegar".
Chinese PinYin : jiā yóu tiān jiàng
Add to the sauce
There's nothing to be desired. wú dài shī guī
try by hook to look for sth.. shàng tiān rù dì
words benefit universal benevolence. rén yán lì pǔ
all the old and recent sorrows. jiù chóu xīn hèn
be superior to the works of the celebrated writers of the contemporary. yā dǎo yuán bái