add details of a story
Embellishment is a Chinese idiom, pronounced Ti ā nzh ī Ji ā y è. It refers to the narration of things or the reporting of other people's words. In order to exaggerate, it adds something that is not in the original. It comes from Zhu Xi's answer to Huang Zi Geng in Song Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
The opposite is appropriate and realistic
The origin of Idioms
In answer to Huang Zi Geng written by Zhu Xi of Song Dynasty, it is said that there are many obstacles in modern people's life
Idiom usage
Combined; used as attributive and adverbial; with derogatory meaning. In order to kill time, Yang Zirong is very amusing. (Qu Bo's the forest and the snow 17)
Chinese PinYin : tiān zhī jiā yè
add details of a story
fat , find grain and brocade. gāo liáng jǐn xiù
make light of travelling a thousand li. bù yuǎn wàn lǐ
spring is all over the human world. chūn mǎn rén jiān
one 's resignation is declined. cí bù huò mìng
exercise one's inventive mind. jiàng xīn dú yùn