summon spirits
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zhu ī h ú NSH è pॸ, which means superstition refers to taking in the soul and causing death. It comes from the sequel of Guixin Zazhi, thirty six praises of Song Jiang by Zhou Mi of Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Although the two walls are engraved with one hundred and eight ways of change, careful reference is a trick to steal the day and capture the soul.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: chasing souls
The origin of Idioms
"Living Yanluo Ruan Xiaoqi: underground Yanluo, chasing the soul."
Idiom explanation
Superstition refers to the ingestion of the soul, resulting in death.
summon spirits
flee at the mere sight of the oncoming force - wàng fēng ér dùn
One's reputation is distinguished. - zī shēng wàng zhòng
do a discreditable thing secretly - àn shì qī xīn
one 's words are obeyed , and one 's plans are followed out sb . 's advice and adopt his plan - yán tīng jì xíng