rumors and slanders
Gossip, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Li ú y á NF ē IW é n, which means unfounded words, mostly refers to back talk, slander, or alienated words. From the book of history, Jin Teng.
Idiom usage
It is a group of small peep gap, the fate of the text, clever words slander, gossip in the folk.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: gossip, gossip
The origin of Idioms
According to the book of history, jinteng: "since King Wu died, it was rumored that Guan Shu and his younger brothers were in the country." "Han Shu · biography of Chu Yuan king" says: "it is a small group to see the gap, decorate the text, slander, gossip, and brag among the people."
Idiom explanation
It's groundless. It is often used to refer to comments, slanders, or words of dissension.
Chinese PinYin : liú yán fēi wén
rumors and slanders
one 's high morality reaching up to the clouds. yì bó yún tiān
In Cao Ying and in Han Dynasty. shēn zài cáo yíng xīn zài hàn
The truth is in the excrement. dào zài shǐ nì
develop a new method of one 's own. dú pì xī jìng