all sorts of gossip
It's a Chinese idiom,
Pinyin is Q ī Zu ǐ B ā sh é,
Paraphrase: it is used to describe a lot of people with different opinions; it is also used to describe a lot of tongue.
Entry
all sorts of gossip
Pinyin
qīzuǐbāshé
Citation explanation
It can be used to describe a variety of people, and it can also be used to describe rap. In the fifth chapter of the biography of Haodan, a famous person in Ming Dynasty, he said, "people are running in high spirits. Suddenly they are stopped by Mr. tie, and they shout all over the place." "The story of Guanyuan: naochi was captured:" although the general didn't say it, I was afraid that the army would talk about it. How could it be good Yuan Mei of the Qing Dynasty wrote in his "duwai Yuyan": "therefore, the Great Duke of the heart is the reason why the officials of the Jin Dynasty are so talkative and sarcastic." Chapter 8 of Pingyao Zhuan: elder Ci was so angry by the monks that he couldn't speak. He came back to the room and shed some tears. Chapter 90 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: it doesn't matter to send ideas and things, but it doesn't attract people's attention.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] seven words and eight words, boisterous; antonym] silent and silent
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's a predicate or adverbial; it's an adjective
Chinese PinYin : qī zuǐ bā shé
all sorts of gossip
leaning on a grass or dependent on a tree. yǐ cǎo fù mù
it is disrespectful to decline to decline. què zhī bù gōng
To suspend troops according to the law. àn jiǎ xiū bīng