blessed spot
Dongtianfudi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ø ngTi ā NF ú D ì, which originally means Taoist, refers to the famous mountain resort where Shinto lives. The latter refers to a place with beautiful scenery. From the story of heaven and earth.
explain
Taoist language refers to the famous mountain resort where Shinto lives. There are ten caves, thirty-six small caves and seventy-two blessed places. The latter refers to a place with beautiful scenery.
The origin of Idioms
Du Guangting of Tang Dynasty: "list the names of ten caves, thirty-six small caves and seventy-two blessed places."
Idiom usage
In Song Chen Liang's reconstruction of Zixiao temple, there is a saying in Taoism that "the heaven and the earth are blessed in the cave, but they do not know where to start, but where to start." Deng Yubin of the Yuan Dynasty wrote: "five mountains and ten continents, heaven and earth are blessed." The fourth chapter of Wu Chengen's journey to the West in the Ming Dynasty: the monkey king's victory and his return to the mountain, the seventy-two cave demon king and the six brothers are all happy. In the cave of heaven and earth, drinking music is incomparable. The twenty-first issue of the story of the white rabbit by Wu Ming of the Ming Dynasty: "red thread and silk, embroidered mattress and flowers, heaven and earth are blessed. This good thing will be seen again today." Chapter 99 of Jing Hua Yuan written by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty: "if you have a few secluded rooms like this, you will live a lifetime here." Bao Lei's Zhu Bajie learning skills: "moss is like a blanket, and the fragrance of flowers is striking. It's really a blessed place."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: famous mountains and rivers, scenic spots and historic sites, Taoyuan Wonderland, blessed land and caves; Antonyms: backwater, poor alley and humble family
Chinese PinYin : dòng tiān fú dì
blessed spot
think back and forth without end. chóu chú bù jué
injure both the state and the people. bìng guó yāng mín
go to and fro in constant streams. luò yì bù jué
take hold of bushes and trees to pull oneself up. pān téng lǎn gě