speak without reserve
In Chinese idioms, Pinyin is zh ī w ú B ù y á n. It means that as long as you know, there is nothing you can't say. It comes from the biography of Cui Guang, a northern historian.
The origin of Idioms
Su Xun, Song Dynasty, wrote in his book "the theory of balance and foresight" that "all the knowledge is self-evident, all the words are endless, the reputation of a hundred people is not encrypted, and the damage of a hundred people is not spared."
Idiom usage
It is contractive; it is predicate and attributive; it contains commendatory meaning. He is very straightforward, and he always knows everything when people ask him for advice. In the biography of Cui guangzhuan in the northern history of China, it is said that "the foolish knowledge of the minister, who knows everything, begged to stop Li prison in order to be pregnant." In the biography of Wei Zheng in the old book of the Tang Dynasty, it is said that "the Emperor Taizong led Zheng to lie in the bedroom and visited the gain and loss (signs) think about it and use it to the full Chapter 4 and Chapter 2 of the strange situation witnessed in the past 20 years: "no matter the mistakes in writing or the tact in dealing with the world, we know everything." In the biography of Li Xian in the history of the Ming Dynasty, he said, "the minister should say everything, but can he steal the throne?"
Chinese PinYin : zhī wú bù yán
speak without reserve
the gods are angry and the people resentful. shén nù rén yuàn
purify the heart and do away with cares. zhāi xīn dí lǜ
seek death or glory on the battlefield. xiào sǐ jiāng chǎng