Empty talk
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Tu ō zh ū K ō ngy á n, which means to express one's feelings in the discussion of words. The same as "empty talk". From preface to & lt; superfluous Theory & gt.
The origin of Idioms
In the preface to "superfluous remarks" written by Zhu Li in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "if Fang will try officials' affairs, then he will seek for the feelings of the people and things and benefit from the disease. He will not rely on empty words."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in dealing with affairs
Chinese PinYin : tuō zhū kōng yán
Empty talk
the honorable and lowly perished together. zhī ài jù fén
fluctuate in line with market conditions. suí háng jiù shì
have a noble revolutionary spirit and great enthusiasm. qì yú xiāo hàn
cook the crane for meat and burn a stringed instrument for fuel -- destroy sth. valuable or fine. zhǔ hè shāo qín
be pessimistic and worldweary. bēi guān yàn shì