Qiyu is a Chinese word, the Chinese pinyin is qǐyǔ, which refers to sweet words, the so-called "smiling hidden knife", or saying frivolous, rude and improper words, with the purpose of deceiving others and using sweet words to deceive. The scope of idle talk is very wide. Any words that make people think evilly belong to idle talk.
In modern Chinese, "qiyu" is usually used to refer to those flashy and over-modified words. Such words often lack practical meaning and are just to gain the attention of others or to please others. For example, when we say that someone's words are "too gorgeous," it means that his words are too gorgeous, over-embellished, and lack substantial content.
However, in some cases, rhetoric can also be regarded as a form of artistic expression, such as rhetorical techniques in poetry, prose and other literary works. This kind of rhetorical technique can make the article more vivid and contagious, thereby attracting the reader's attention.
The word "Qiyu" has a certain degree of ambiguity and has different meanings in different contexts. In Buddhism, it mainly refers to the use of gorgeous, over-modified language to deceive or seduce others, while in modern Chinese, it refers to those flashy, over-modified words.
The word combinations of Qi include: Qili, Qimeng, Qiluo, Qiyu, Qiyun.
Beautiful:
Bright and beautiful, the West Lake looks particularly beautiful in spring. Detailed explanation of gorgeous, bright and beautiful. One of Cao Pi's good deeds in the Three Kingdoms Wei Dynasty is touching and unforgettable. Tang Ji Ji Zhongzhong's memory is quite extravagant.
Qimeng:
Sweet dream. Not long after the Qianjia period, Qu Qiubai randomly played the Preface to the Dynasty, and Qimeng, who sang and danced in Kunqu opera, was disrupted by the rebels with red scarves and long hair. Yu Dafu gave a poem to a girl from Gusu: A spring dream with flowers similar to it, strong in February.
Qiluo:
Generally refers to luxurious silk fabrics or silk clothes. The love poems of Xu and Qian of the Han Dynasty are beautiful and colorful, with golden green and dark colors. In the Tang and Qin Dynasties, Shi Peng, a poor girl named Taoyu, did not know Qiluoxiang, so she planned to ask a good matchmaker to help her. The four dimensions of Ming and Zhang are strong.
Qiyu:
Buddhist language. Involving boudoir and other colorful words and all kinds of obscene language. It is listed as one of the four karmas in the Ten Good Precepts. Emperor Wu of the Liang Dynasty in the Southern Dynasties responded to the edict of the Bodhi Tree Ode, but what he said about the beauty of the country was not true, nor was it untrue.
Qiyun:
Beautiful as Qiyun. In the Southern Dynasties, Liang Jiangyan studied the Tuyuan Fu of Liang Wang and built the Pavilion of Qiyun and the Platform to Dispel Xia. During the Spring Festival Gala of the Tang Dynasty, Chen Ziliang watched the group of princes return to the dance pavilion with eight rhymes and beautiful clouds, and the Danxia thin blowing stage.