Empty talk
Empty talk vernacular is a Chinese vocabulary, which describes only saying without practice, or only saying without proof.
Empty talk interpretation describes saying without practice, or saying without proof. [explanation]: to describe a person who only says but does not implement, or who only says but does not have facts to prove. In the old book of the Tang Dynasty, the annals of emperor Xianzong, Pei Du said, "a gentleman and a villain should distinguish himself according to what he has done." He said: "it is easy to say good things, but difficult to practice them. You should do what you say, and don't say it in empty words. " [pinyin code]: kksh [synonym]: empty spoken vernacular [lamp maze]: full mouth classical Chinese [usage]: subject predicate type; as predicate and object; adjective light says nothing [structure]: subject predicate type. It's guaranteed that I didn't do it for a long time, isn't it? [commonly used degree]: 3 / 3
Chinese PinYin : kōng kǒu shuō bái huà
Empty talk
contention of a hundred schools of thought. bǎi jiā zhēng míng
Draw a tiger but not a dog. huà hǔ bù chéng fǎn lèi quǎn
lose everything and gain nothing. yǒu hài wú lì
full of energy ; with high spirit. jīng shén bǎi bèi
heaven is high but listen to the lowliest. tiān gāo tīng xià