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As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is d ù NR ù K ō NGM é n, which means to become a monk; to avoid the world and enter Buddhism. From Li Zhicheng.
Idiom explanation
Escape: escape; empty door: refers to Buddhism, because Buddhism believes that the world is empty.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 28 of Li Zhicheng written by Yao xueyin: "when the world sees peace again, he will never miss precious things. He will retire after success and become a man independent of the world."
Idiom usage
The author points out that the family is a monk or nun. Those who see through escape; those who are obsessed with lose their lives. (five chapters of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin) my heart is as dead as ashes, and my shape is as haggard as a tree. I can't entangle with the world of mortals, I just want to escape. (Wang Huo's war and man (2) Volume 3) unexpectedly, a year later, the lady also wrote a farewell letter in the style of Six Dynasties, which she sent to Suo Fu, and she also went away. (Chapter one or three of the flowers of the evil sea) "you're old and big, so why don't you plan for the future and marry and have children?" "I'm sorry, but I'm out of my way! "
Chinese PinYin : dùn rù kōng mén
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conceal the true state of affairs from above and below oneself. qī shàng wǎng xià
Drinking blood to break the heart. yǐn xuè bēng xīn
excessive fondness of making literary quotations and historical allusions. diào shū dài
A traitor is like a fox. jiān tóng guǐ yù,xíng ruò hú shǔ