overcome material desires
It is a Chinese idiom, CH ā och é Nb á s ú, which originally refers to the deep skill of Buddhists. After more than describe talent and morality far more than ordinary people. To describe a person who is more than ordinary and different from the common. It can also be said to be out of the ordinary or out of the ordinary. It's from a new account of the world: moral conduct.
Idiom usage
When Meng Ming ascended mount Taihua to the rock of star, he saw a man in a crane cloak with a feather crown and red lips. (Chapter 47 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty)
The origin of Idioms
Liu Xiao quoted Xie Cheng from the book of the later Han Dynasty: "Xu Dan, a Confucianist, was born in Nanchang, Henan Province. He was wonderful and lofty in the Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: transcendent and outstanding [antonym]: all living beings, nobody
Chinese PinYin : chāo chén bá sú
overcome material desires
enjoy great popularity among the people. kǒu bēi zài dào
feel ashamed of one's inferiority. zì kuì bù rú
popular criticisms are raging. wù yì fèi téng
be ready to write down anything encountered. huái qiān wò qiàn
A cup of wine is not as good as a pot of rice. gōng fàn bù jí hú sūn