there is a great deal of gossips
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R é NY á NJ í J í, which means that people's accusations and attacks spread everywhere. They are mostly used to talk about other people's reputation. It comes from the biography of Yi Wang Fei in Jiangdu of the Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Native place: chaotic appearance. People's accusations and attacks spread everywhere.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu of the Eastern Han Dynasty wrote in Hanshu Jiangdu Yi Wang Fei Zhuan: "if you are a native of spoken Chinese in middle school, you will never return to Jiangdu."
Idiom usage
Example: Ming Feng Menglong's "warning of the world" Volume 4: I also heard the words and excuses of people outside, and I blame my husband. Chapter 28 of Li Baojia's the appearance of officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: when he found out that the army had been blamed, his younger nephew turned into a mistake and hid himself until now. He didn't use up all the introduction fees. In addition, he suffered a lot from the increase. If you talk about the friendship between you and your nephew, you should try your best to report it. According to Wang Maoyin's biography in the draft of the history of the Qing Dynasty, "it was handled in a good way, with people's words as an excuse, but no one dared to speak for the emperor, or worried that there was no evidence."
Chinese PinYin : rén yán jí jí
there is a great deal of gossips
the dragon 's liver and the phoenix 's marrow. lóng gān fèng nǎo
posing as a pheasant standing on one foot. jīn jī dú lì