there is abundant evidence
According to the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǒ up í ngy ǒ UJ ù, which means that there is both evidence and basis. It comes from Yu Shi Ming Yan, Chen Yushi's skillful exploration of the gold hairpin.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong's Yu Shi Ming Yan Chen Yu Shi Qiao Kan Jin Chai Dian: "and his family sent the old master yuan to invite you. It's well founded. It's not that you are self contemptuous."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or adverbial; with a certificate. The lust ghost had not seen it yet, and when he heard what they said was well founded, he entangled it with errors and believed it to be true. The eighth chapter of Zhang Nanzhuang's he Dian in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: no evidence, no evidence
Chinese PinYin : yǒu píng yǒu jù
there is abundant evidence
dredge for a needle in the sea. hǎi dǐ lāo zhēn
a person endowed with the talent to govern and to serve. jì shì zhī cái
felicitous wish of making money. zhāo cái jìn bǎo
the dog of jie barked at yao-utterly unscrupulous in its zeal to serve its master. jié quǎn fèi yáo
Pass five passes and cut six generals. guò wǔ guān,zhǎn liù jiàng