keep on repeating at great length
Li á nzh ā NGL è ID ú, a Chinese idiom, means too much space and long diction. From stone · Hecai.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Zhiji of Tang Dynasty wrote in his book Shi Tong he Cai: "so he took the lead in his hands, and most of them had no comprehensive knowledge of Quan; there were many articles, but few words of euphemism."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: a long list
Antonym: concise and comprehensive
Idiom usage
It is used as attributive and adverbial.
Examples
Qing, there is a scholar Yan, to grass grass sparse cheap, not for luring, not for fear of disaster, in a series of articles, anti theory today and minister. Hou Fangyu's Nansheng shice 2 in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : lián zhāng lèi dú
keep on repeating at great length
utilize the contradiction between foreign countries and suppress them. yǐ yí zhì yí
the nine schools of thought and three religions. jiǔ liú sān jiào