excellent singing or polished writing
Zhu yuanyujie is a Chinese word, which is used as object and attribute. It is interpreted as a metaphor of mellow and clear poetry. It comes from Song Lian's preface to the return of Tianyuan Zen master Jungong to Siming in the Ming Dynasty: "because of his close reading of several articles, all of them are round and pure, and the Dharma is strict."
Idiom explanation
It is a metaphor for mellow and clear poetry.
The origin of Idioms
Song Lian of the Ming Dynasty wrote a preface to the return of Tianyuan Zen master Jungong to Siming: "because of his close reading of several articles, all of them are round and pure, and the Dharma is strict."
Examples of Idioms
Example: the front and back of the text are opened and closed If the moon shines on the shadow, the shadow will be lost after the moon passes; if the wind sweeps the leaves, the wind stops the leaves; if the text of ~. The fourth chapter of Hua Yue Chen
Idiom usage
Usage: used as object and attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Discrimination of words
Related idioms: surrounded by pearls, precious pearls, clean words and deeds, honest and clean
excellent singing or polished writing
All the people go back to the sea - zhòng liú guī hǎi
beat drums and clang gongs -- in + battle - jī gǔ míng jīn
the waters and skies merge in one colour - shuǐ tiān yī sè
confrontation of the three parties in court - sān tóu duì àn