Shake off the spirit
Shake off the spirit, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǒ us ǒ UJ ī ngsh é n, meaning cheer up. It comes from the biography of Jingde, meeting Zen master an in Guangqing temple, Hangzhou.
The origin of Idioms
In Song Dynasty, Shi Daoyuan's biography of lanterns in Jingde · meeting Zen master an at Guangqing temple in Hangzhou: "what's the meaning of guangtun Wanxiang's learning from Taoism?" The teacher said, "cheer up."
Idiom usage
Examples
The fifth chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: "fly to shake off your spirit and fight against Lv Bu. More than 50 matches in a row, no division. "
Chinese PinYin : dǒu sǒu jīng shén
Shake off the spirit
The way is good for safety, the potential is high for danger. dào gāo yì ān,shì gāo yì wēi
hate to leave a place where one has lived long. ān gù zhòng qiān
good men destroyed with the bad. lán ài tóng fén
curb the violent and assist the weak. chú qiáng fú ruò