make impertinent remarks
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ǒ uch ū B ù x ù n, which means to say something very humble. From the romance of the Three Kingdoms.
Notes on Idioms
Humility: humility and obedience.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 74 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: "but he said that Guan Gong was sitting in the tent when he suddenly approached his horse and reported:" Cao Cao was inferior to ban and led seven strong soldiers to come. Pound, the vanguard in the front of the army, carried a wooden vessel and swore to fight the general to the death. The soldiers are thirty miles away from the city. "
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: rude and [antonym]: polite
Idiom usage
He is very modest. example CHONGYING Biao's eloquence, please make a decision by the prime minister's military order. The 28th chapter of Feng Shen Yan Yi by Xu Zhonglin in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : kǒu chū bù xùn
make impertinent remarks
Comparison between fish and wild goose. yú guàn yàn bǐ
the great power is within one 's grasp. dà quán zài wò
grand occasions in those years. tian bao dang nian
Xiang Zhuang's sword dance is aimed at Peigong. xiàng zhuāng wǔ jiàn,yì zài pèi gōng
The river does not make the river. jiāng shuǐ bù fàn hé shuǐ