Jiang Langcai can describe himself as best as he can.
Jiang Lang’s talents are exhausted [jiāng láng cái jìn]?
Interpretation: In the Southern Dynasties, Jiang Yan was famous for his poetry when he was young, and was known as Jiang Lang. In his later years, his poems lacked charm, and people said he had exhausted his talent. It is a metaphor for the decline of people's literary thinking.
Source: Zhong Rong's "Poetry" of the Southern and Northern Dynasties: "In the early days, Yan conquered Xuancheng County, so he stayed in Yeting. He dreamed of a beautiful husband, who called himself Guo Pu. He said to Yan: 'I have a pen for you. After being there for many years, I can see him again. "Yan Tan took the five-color pen to teach him, and then he wrote a poem, which is no longer an idiom."
Translation: Jiang Lang was the governor of Xuancheng. When he returned home from work, he took a lunch break in the pavilion and dreamed that a man who called himself Guo Pu said to him: "I have kept my pen with you for many years, and you should give it back to me now." Jiang Yan immediately asked Huai As soon as he touched it, he actually took out a five-color pen, so he returned the pen to Guo Pu. After that, when Jiang Yan started writing poetry, he no longer had any famous quotes. Therefore, people say that he has exhausted his talents.
Antonyms
Export into a chapter [ chū kǒu chéng zhāng ]?
Interpretation: What is said is an article, describing quick writing or good eloquence.
Source: "The Book of Songs·Xiaoya·Duren": "What he says is well-organized."
Example: He is full of ethical scriptures and speaks well.