sincere wish
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y à B à nx à nxi à ng, which means a metaphor for a very sincere heart (used in wishes). From fairy mountain.
Idiom explanation
Xinxiang: in the old days, it was called piety in the heart, which was the same as burning incense.
The origin of Idioms
Han Luo's poem "Xianshan" in the Tang Dynasty: "a pillar of fragrant heart, the cave is open, the pine is wrinkled and the moss is half raspberry."
Idiom usage
As a predicate; used in a wish. examples the editor sincerely appeals to the domestic literary giants to talk more about the wind and the moon and less complain, so that the common author and the editor can be forgiven. Lu Xun's postscript of pseudo freedom Book quoted the supplement of Shenbao, free talk.
sincere wish
eat vegetarian food before the Buddha - cháng zhāi xiù fó
achieve success and win recognition - gōng chéng míng jiù