peace of heart or mind attained by staying away from
Pure ears, Chinese vocabulary.
Pinyin: ě RG ē NQ ī NGJ ì ng
Derived from Buddhist terms, interpretation: ear nothing noisy, refers to nothing to disturb.
There is a fixed collocation of "Qinggen Zi".
Entry
peace of heart or mind attained by staying away from
Pinyin
ěrgēnqīngjìng
Citation explanation
Nothing bothers me. Yuan · Li Xingdao's "the story of the ashes": Zhang Haitang, since he married a member of the staff, he has a quiet ear. Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty wrote the seventh chapter of outlaws of the Marsh: "Zhishen also took advantage of Jiuxing. When they all went out to see, there was a crow's nest on the green sun tree. "If you take down the ladder, you'll have to keep your ears clean." Chapter 5 of the scholars by Wu Jingzi of the Qing Dynasty: our middleman set up a pen and paper with him, saying that it was useless to find waste paper, so that this matter would come to an end. "It's time to send Luo Tong back and keep his ears clean," says Chen Xun Mei Ling's lost wife Qian Zhongshu's Fortress Besieged, p.214: "it's all your fault. Listen to a lot of gossip and tell me. Otherwise, I'll be quiet and I won't care about others" (see article "Liugen Qingjing").
On the origin of words
It comes from Volume 1 of Ji Lun: "what kind of ears? It's said that the four kinds are made by the ear, which is based on the quiet color. " the word "Qingjing in the ears" appears completely in the volume of yuanjuejing: "Qingjing in the ears is the result of hearing Qingjing; Qingjing in the roots is the result of hearing Qingjing; Qingjing in the ears is the result of knowing Qingjing; Qingjing in the dust is the result of knowing Qingjing." ear root, one of the "six roots", refers to the auditory organ and its function. It is said that the "root of ears" of all living beings in the Saha world is the most spiritual. Therefore, most Buddhists use sound to do Buddhist work to cultivate all living beings. "Ear root pure" is a kind of "six root pure". "Pure ears" can achieve "Tian Er Tong". You can hear from far and near, and know the language of all living beings. The sixth volume of Leng Yan Jing also points out: "one root returns to the source, and six roots become liberation." from: [source of the proverb Buddha (edited by Chinese Buddhist Culture Research Institute)]
usage
As an object or complement, it means not listening to gossip
Chinese PinYin : ěr gēn qīng jìng
peace of heart or mind attained by staying away from
Be in charge of family discipline. dāng jiā lǐ jì
be busy enough with one 's own affairs. zì gù bù xiá