overcome material desires
Out of the ordinary, dust, vulgar: refers to the world, the world; out: beyond. Originally, it means that Buddhists' Kung Fu is deep and beyond the world. After more than describe talent and morality far more than ordinary people.
Idiom explanation
Idiom: out of the world Pinyin: Ch ā och é NCH ū s ú interpretation: out of the world, dust, custom: refers to the world, the world; out: beyond. Originally, it means that Buddhists' Kung Fu is deep and beyond the world. After more than describe talent and morality far more than ordinary people.
The origin of Idioms
[source] Liu Xiao quoted Xie Cheng's Houhanshu in the Southern Song Dynasty Liu Yiqing's Shi Shuo Xin Yu · De Xing: "Xu Xun, a Confucianist, was born in Nanchang of Yuzhang. He was wonderful in the Qing Dynasty, and was extraordinary."
Examples of Idioms
[example] when Meng Ming ascended mount Taihua to the star rock, he saw a man wearing a crane cloak with a feather crown and red lips. The 47th chapter of Eastern Zhou Dynasty annals by Feng Menglong in Ming Dynasty
Idiom usage
Usage is used as predicate, object and attribute.
overcome material desires
confusion and disorder of state affairs - tiáo táng fèi gēng
be able to handle a job with ease because one has had previous experience - jià qīng jiù shú
drift about without any definite trace like running water or duckweed - làng jì fú zōng
be friends in the days when hard up - pín jiàn zhī jiāo
an army fighting for a just cause has high morale - shī zhí wéi zhuàng