Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - What are you talking about?

What are you talking about?

Cut the crap and listen.

To put it bluntly, I heard an idiom from China. The pronunciation is G ū wà ngyá nzh:, G ū wà ngt: ngzh:, which means I can speak and listen at will. What you say is not necessarily well-founded or valuable. You don't have to believe it so seriously.

Turtle in a jar, Chinese idiom, pinyin is wè ngzh, not ngzh and bi. It means something that is under control and cannot escape. From Shi Mingyan.

The foot of a thousand miles, an idiom in China, means a swift horse, and it was later used to describe handsome talents. It's from Han Shi Zhuan. Unity in a cage is an idiom in China, which means to mix indiscriminately. Read and write key words from Zhang Zhongxing's poems.

Water-covered clothes, an idiom in China, means Y and d à izh and Shu ǐ in pinyin, which means water is as narrow as a belt. It means that although it is separated by rivers, lakes and seas, the distance is not far enough to be an obstacle to communication. From The History of Heather Chen Houzhu. Run amok, an idiom in China, is pronounced sü yü wà ngxí ng, which means run amok unscrupulously, and it comes from "words are exposed in wild acid".

China's idiom refers to the pursuit of something that doesn't exist or is unreasonable, which comes from Cao Qingxue Qin's Dream of Red Mansions. Mislistening, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is g ū wà ngt and ngzh:, which means listening casually, not necessarily believing. From Zhuangzi's Homogeneous Matter Theory.

This is a China idiom. Pinyin is gǔyánwàngjǔ, which means talking nonsense and acting rashly. From Jin Shu Zhiyu Biography: "I never caught foreign objects since I was a child. Although I have talent, I don't know who he is, so I dare not speak, so I can't answer the holy question. "

Mislistening, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is g ū wà ngt and ngzh:, which means listening casually, not necessarily believing. From Zhuangzi's Homogeneous Matter Theory.

Don't ask questions, this is an idiom in China, which means to let go when you can, and don't pursue responsibility. It means to give temporary tolerance to those who are at fault. From "South Village Drop Out of Farming". Forget it, an idiom of China means to put it aside; Also known as "regardless of aunt" and "regardless of aunt".