Return to the void
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ǎ nx ū R ù h ú n, which means people are ignorant. It comes from "twenty four poems · majestic" by Sikong Tu of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
(1) it refers to the emptiness of the poem, which is in the state of the wholeness. ② It refers to people who are ignorant and ignorant.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: in Sikongtu's "twenty four poems · xionghun" of the Tang Dynasty, it is said that "returning to the void and entering the turbid, accumulating the strength is the strength." [example]: they are ~, they are "nothing" -- there is no such thing as them in the world.
Discrimination of words
Usage: used as predicate or attribute; used of people or things
Return to the void
make a deaf man and a blind man see - fā méng zhèn kuì
national economy and people 's livelihood - guó jì mín shēng
fabricate the details of a story - jiā zhī tiān yè
expect the reality to correspond to the name - zhēng míng zé shí