Vatican Fritillaria
Fance Beiye, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f à NC è B è iy è, which means Buddhist scriptures. Originally, Buddhist scriptures were mostly written on the leaves of bedoro in Sanskrit. It comes from Zheng Da pin Mi Tuo Jing translated by Wei.
The origin of Idioms
In Gong Zizhen's Zheng Da pin Mi Tuo Jing Wei Yi of the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "fan CE Bei Ye increases loss by meaning, arranges comparison by meaning and divides it by parataxis, so that the translator can accept it."
Idiom usage
It refers to the Sutra. Example: in Tian Wen's poem "get up early after illness and become a poem": "recite Vatican shells by burning incense on the basis of a few principles." According to the twelfth Yuekao in the general textual research of documents, it is said that "Bei is a thing, its greatness can accommodate several rises, and Li's greatness is also Today's Sanskrit music is used with cymbals. Shi's so-called conch. It's also true that the state of Chitu blows it to meet the Sui envoys. In the music of Liang Wu, there are tongziji and fanbei Press, Bei, the original error is "with", now is.
Chinese PinYin : fàn cè bèi yè
Vatican Fritillaria
with both extensive knowledge and profound scholarship. dà hán xì rù
feel not disgraceful in looking down and up -- having a clear conscience. fǔ yǎng wú kuì
goods overflow and the people are happy. wù fù mín kāng