implication
By implication, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y á NW à izh à y à, which means that it has this meaning, but it is not clearly stated in the words. It comes from Liuyi Shihua and Shilin Shihua.
Idiom explanation
There are other meanings in the words, but they are not clearly expressed in the words.
The origin of Idioms
In Ouyang Xiu's notes on poetry on June 1, Song Dynasty, Sheng Yu tasted and said to Yu, "although a poet expresses his ideas, it's difficult to make words. If the meaning of the new language work, the predecessors have not, this is also good. It's hard to describe a scene. For example, at present, it contains not enough meaning. It can be seen outside the words, and then it's the end of the story. " Ye mengde's Shi Lin Shi Hua of the Song Dynasty said, "seven words are hard to be powerful, but the sentence is powerful and flexible, and it doesn't lose its implication."
Idiom usage
There are two or two different words in the same "off the string" and "off the string". The implication is that the less is better than the more. The fifth book of Weixian Shuzhong and shedi written by Zheng Xie in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : yán wài zhī yì
implication
To be selfish and to be public. fèi sī lì gōng
See not take, think of thousands of miles. jiàn zhī bù qǔ,sī zhī qiān lǐ
do away with all fetishes and superstitions. pò chú mí xìn