Snow and frost
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is j ī Xu ě f ē ngshu ā ng, which means to describe a person's integrity. It comes from the biography of Wang Feng in Qi Jiang Xia, a southern history.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Wang Feng of qijiangxia in the southern history, he wrote the Fu of Xiubai in order to see his ambition, saying: '" The wind can't break its branches, and the snow can't change its properties. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Examples
It's not my husband's natural beauty of heaven and earth, which contains the purity of the universe, who can bear the posture of flying clouds and sighing at the sun, holding the bone of accumulated snow and frost. Preface to Fu Cha by Luo Binwang in Tang Dynasty
Jin Luji's poem "imitating orchid like rising sun" reads: "Jiashu like rising sun, and the frost seals its strips."
Snow and frost
befuddle the minds of the public - xiáo luàn shì tīng