with no reality whatever
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ū w ú PI ā OMI ǎ o, which describes emptiness. It refers to the unreal that can't be seen or touched, just like people's state of mind, without a sense of substance. From Song of everlasting regret.
Idiom explanation
Nothingness: emptiness; ethereal: vague and vague appearance. To describe emptiness.
The origin of Idioms
In the song of everlasting regret written by Bai Juyi of Tang Dynasty, "I suddenly heard that there were fairy mountains on the sea, and the mountains were in the void."
Idiom usage
It's all about. What gods and ghosts are there! I never believed that. (the 25th chapter of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in Qing Dynasty)
with no reality whatever
half literary and half vernacular - bàn wén bàn bái