Sharp teeth
Li Ya Ling Ya is a kind of Chinese vocabulary, which means to be eloquent. It comes from the second discount of "he Han Shan" by Zhang Guobin in Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Li Ya Ling Ya Pinyin: l ì ch ǐ L í ngy ā. have a glib.
The origin of Idioms
Source: yuan · Zhang Guobin's "he Hanshan" second fold: "you don't listen to that guy's short talk, that kind of sharp teeth."
Examples of Idioms
Example: don't use long guns and big swords. You're really a good murderer. If you're born, you'll eat people's brains. ——Lu Cai, Ming Dynasty
Idiom usage
Usage: as predicate, attribute, adverbial; refers to the eloquence
Chinese PinYin : lì chǐ líng yā
Sharp teeth
a heavy load of 30000 catties. qiān jūn zhòng fù