teach orally
Word of mouth, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ǒ u ě RXi ā ngch é ng, meaning to accept rumors. It comes from the answer to Wang Zhongjin written by Fang Xiaoru in Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
One of the answers to Wang Zhongjin written by Fang Xiaoru of the Ming Dynasty: "in the past few years, the literati and bureaucrats have not observed the truth, and they have been telling each other that they are obscene. The longer they are, the more erroneous they are
Analysis of Idioms
Oral and psychological teaching
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in education without words.
Chinese PinYin : kǒu ěr xiāng chéng
teach orally
The rat swindles the dog and the thief. shǔ cuàn gǒu dào
as beautiful as the jade ornament of a cap -- a handsome man. měi rú guān yù
Enrich the country and strengthen the army. fù guó jiāng bīng
Chanting the moon and mocking the wind. yǒng yuè cháo fēng