Blatantly blatant
Blatant, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ù D ò ngy á ns ì, which means to look uneasy and intonation disorder. It comes from Zuo Zhuan, the 12th year of Wengong.
[name] blatant
[Pinyin] m ù D ò ngy á ns ì
It means to look uneasy and have a wrong tone.
[source] in the twelfth year of the Duke of Wen in Zuozhuan: "the emissary's eyes are moving, but if he is afraid of me, he will escape."
[example] Cheng Hui knew that he was not good, so he left his family temple to make a list of the crimes of Mu Yan and left deputy marshal Gao Qi. The twelfth chapter of the romance of Yuan history by Cai Dongfan
[usage] used as predicate and attributive; used in people's manner, etc
Chinese PinYin : mù dòng yán sì
Blatantly blatant
See the soup and see the wall. jiàn gēng jiàn qiáng