talk wildly
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is k ǒ uch ū Ku á ngy á n, which means to say arrogant words. It means to speak arrogantly, wantonly and nonsense. From the outlaws of the marsh.
The origin of Idioms
The seventy second chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in Ming Dynasty: "when Song Jiang heard this, he came to see it in a hurry, but it was Shi Jin, the" nine grain dragon "and Mu Hong, who did not block it, who was drunk in the attic and raved."
Analysis of Idioms
Speak up
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in speech. example the assassin's surname is Li Mingchun, a native of Zhengding Prefecture in Zhili. His body was short and fierce. He still defies the government by tying his hands and feet with iron locks. On the 23rd day of Zhao Zi Yue by Lao She, he took Su ya to a remote bar and sat down. He said to Wan Fang's group, "I can't stand these people the most. After studying in a university, I think I know why. In fact, I don't know anything. I talk wildly and nobody cares." When he was proud of himself, he made a wild statement, claiming that he would wipe out the Red Army in Sichuan in three months.
Idiom story
During the Sui Dynasty, Yang guangmou took the crown prince's place. Under the encouragement of Yu Wenshu, he took the opportunity to frame people surnamed Li, so people surnamed Li all over the world fled. Only Li Jing didn't believe in evil. He went to the temple to ask for divination. He talked wildly in public and wanted to be the son of heaven. Unfortunately, the hexagrams showed that he was just an assistant minister. He had to wait for the time to move.
Chinese PinYin : kǒu chū kuáng yán
talk wildly
people are hurrying to and fro. dōng lái xī qù
exhaust oneself with persuasion. héng shuō shù shuō
Soldiers come to meet generals, water comes to earth weirs. bīng lái jiàng yíng,shuǐ lái tǔ yàn
investigate the hidden mysteries of things. tàn yōu suǒ yǐn