spread from mouth to mouth
One pass ten, ten pass hundred
[Pinyin] y ī Chu á NSH í, sh í Chu á Nb ǎ I
[explanation] originally refers to the spread of disease, later describes the spread of news very fast.
This paper cites the interpretation of Yi Zhuan Shi, Shi Zhuan Bai [Pinyin] y ī Chu á NSH í, sh í Chu á Nb ǎ i [source] the funeral of Qing Yi Lu by Tao Wang of Song Dynasty: "Yi Zhuan Shi, Shi Zhuan Bai, spread infinitely, so it is called Yi run." [example] since Gack married a girl, everyone talked about it, and it spread to Lu Cui, Bo Er Ma and other party members. In the 16th chapter of "Nie Hai Hua" written by Zeng Pu in Qing Dynasty, it is a complex sentence; it is used as predicate and clause; it describes the rapid spread of news
Chinese PinYin : yī chuán shí,shí chuán bǎi
spread from mouth to mouth
From the beginning to the end. chè shǒu chè wěi
it is better to leave a deficiency uncovered than to have it covered without discretion. nìng quē wù làn
praise one's own work or goods. lǎo wáng mài guā