Bury jade in incense
Bury jade and bury incense, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ì y ù m á IXI ā ng, meaning the death of a beautiful woman. From the preface to yingti.
The origin of Idioms
Wu Wenying's preface to yingti in the Southern Song Dynasty said, "farewell to the empress, no letter from Liuqiao, going to Huawei, burying jade and burying incense, several storms."
Analysis of Idioms
A synonym for burying incense and jade
Idiom usage
The death of a beautiful woman. In the song of Chen Shi, a disciple of Guo Fangqing, an old prostitute in Jiaofang, written by Gao Qi of Ming Dynasty: "how many years have you been buried in jade and buried in incense?"
Chinese PinYin : yì yù mái xiāng
Bury jade in incense
a net open on three sides -- purposely leave loopholes for an escape from the law. wǎng kāi sān miàn
mess up something because of mishandling. zhì sī ér fén
reject saying because the speaker is what or who he is. yǐ rén fèi yán