Sanmu Sanxun
Sanmu Sanxun, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā nm ù s ā nx ū n, which means to bathe in incense repeatedly, indicating solemnity or piety. It comes from Li Qingzhao's Qi Gu Li Qi.
Idiom explanation
Bathe in incense again and again. Show solemnity or piety. It is also called "Sanmu Sanxun".
The origin of Idioms
The second poem of Song Dynasty's Cheng Ju's "my work" is: "once again, one covers the mountain and dock, three bathes and three smokes screen the dust of the world."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Sanxun Sanmu, Sanjiao Sanyu, Sanyu Sanxun antonym: perfunctory
Idiom usage
As an object or attributive, it can be used to deal with things? Yuan Haowen's poem "huaishuneng" and song Chengju's poem "ouzuo" part two: "once again, cover the mountain and dock, three bathes and three smokes, screen the dust of the world." In Song Dynasty, Li Qingzhao's Qi Gu Li Qi, a scholar of the Imperial Academy, said, "if you want to return to WanMu, you need to bathe and smoke three times."
Sanmu Sanxun
cause one 's fame to glow in the pages of history - gōng biāo qīng shǐ