speak carelessly , rapidly , voluminously like the outflow of river water when the sluice gates are opened
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin, is x ì NK ǒ UK ā IH ē, which means that it refers to a random utterance; it is the same as "Xinkou Kaihe". From Qi Ying bu.
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of Qi Ying Bu written by Shang Zhongxian in Yuan Dynasty: "you have to live and die, and you have to stop talking freely."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and adverbial.
Idiom story
During the period of Chu Han conflict, Liu Bang and Xiang Yu fought fiercely in Lingbi. Liu Bang was defeated and stationed troops in Xingyang. Xiang Yu granted yingbu the title of "emperor Dangyang" and led 400000 people to Jiujiang. How could Liu Bang's "dianyeguan" persuade yingbu to surrender. However, he still surrendered to Liu Bang. Liu Bang deliberately annoyed him, and later hosted a banquet to honor him as "Marquis of Jiujiang".
Chinese PinYin : xìn kǒu kāi hē
speak carelessly , rapidly , voluminously like the outflow of river water when the sluice gates are opened
riches and honour make a person arrogant. fù guì jiāo rén
change suddenly and unexpectedly. biàn shēng bù cè
have no opinions of one's own. zhù shì dào móu