be spotlessly clean
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi ā NCH é Nb ù R ǎ n, which originally refers to Buddhists' practice of excluding material desires and keeping their hearts clean; now it generally refers to not being affected by bad habits and bad atmosphere at all; it is also used to describe very clean and clean. From Fayuan Zhulin.
The origin of Idioms
"If the Bodhisattva is walking in the dry earth mountain, the earth will not touch his feet. If the wind blows through the earth mountain, it will become dust, and even the dust will not touch the Buddha."
Idiom usage
To be spotless is to be spotless. Example Zhang Lei of Song Dynasty wrote "plum blossoms in the garden after a light snow in the twelfth lunar month": "spotless, fragrant to the bone, Gu shoots at the immortal, and the wind is exposed." she has always been a tidy person, and her household appliances and floors are spotless. The writing brush and inkstone on the desk are fine and spotless. Ming Dynasty Feng Menglong's Xingshi Hengyan Volume 15
be spotlessly clean
peace and danger convert mutually - ān wēi xiāng yì
introduce comic remarks in dialogue - sā kē dǎ hùn
Rootless wood, water without source - wú gēn zhī mù,wú yuán zhī shuǐ