what one says is plausible
Zhenzhenyouci is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is zh è nzh è NY ǒǒ UC í, which means to be upright. It describes people who think they have a good reason and keep talking. It comes from the issue of tariff power.
The origin of Idioms
Liang Qichao's "the issue of tariff power" in the Qing Dynasty said: "today, those who accuse others of being exclusive of foreign affairs are not only eloquent, but also negligent
Idiom usage
As a predicate, attribute, adverbial; refers to people's attitude. The Beiping dialect of Xiao Shuner's mother is rich in vocabulary and crisp in intonation when it comes to being reasonable and reasonable. Lao She's four generations in the same hall
Analysis of Idioms
Antonyms: strong sense of reason, strict sense of righteousness, eloquence, and poor sense of reason, tongue tied, and poor expression
Chinese PinYin : zhèn zhèn yǒu cí
what one says is plausible
the rain comes down in a deluge. dà yǔ páng tuó
scant oneself in food and clothes. jié yī suō shí
seize every opportunity to secure personal gains. zuān tiān dǎ dòng