Right and wrong
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ǎ ngsh ì Shu ō f ē I, which means to talk irresponsibly. It comes from the story of Jing Chai.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Ke Danqiu's Jing Chai Ji Shou Chai: "although the financial gift is slight, why do you talk right and wrong?"
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: gossiping
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; used to comment on things, etc. "Professor Zou Hengfu was dismissed by Guanghua School of management of Peking University because" he seldom attended school in the past few years ". Professor Zou thinks that Zhang Weiying, the president of the Institute, is trying to punish him because "he had a lot of disdain for Zhang Weiying's academic achievements and personality before, and he was not willing to vote for Zhang's promotion to President". For this reason, Professor Zou accused "Zhang Weiying's dismissal is a kind of retaliatory act", and he was furious on the other side of the ocean. Recently, he has been busy one after another "You've become independent directors everywhere, and you've come all over China to do amazing lecture tours," and then you say, "we need to shake out all the things about Zhang Weiying." Professor Zou's astonishing words once again successfully aroused everyone's appetite. He talked about right and wrong, and made a lot of arguments. " (Yin Qian's Banghe era, page 12, 268)
Chinese PinYin : jiǎng shì shuō fēi
Right and wrong
without money after one 's death. shēn hòu xiāo tiáo
remarkable in talent and quick in movement. gāo cái jí zú
melt like ice and break like tiles. bīng sàn wǎ jiě
Vertebral burying and tunneling. chuí mái chuān jué