convenient ways
Convenient door, Chinese idiom, Pinyin f ā n ɡ Bi à nzh ī m é n, was originally the way for Buddhism to guide people into religion, but later it was a convenient way. It comes from the stele of relic pagoda of baozhengwei temple in Guangzhou.
Idiom explanation
Convenience: this Buddhist language refers to flexible treatment.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Bo's stele of relic Pagoda in baozhengwei Temple of Guangzhou in Tang Dynasty said: "when vimo saw the handle, he could build a convenient gate for him; when Dao an and Xie GUI came back, he thought about the affairs of the imperial court."
Analysis of Idioms
A shortcut to the end
Idiom usage
It's more formal; it's an object; it's used with "Kai". If you want to arrest the master, you will become a spouse. The fourth part of Feng Weimin's "the sacrifice of monks and nuns" in Ming Dynasty is that he is honest and upright, and he never opens for himself or his family.
Chinese PinYin : fāng biàn zhī mén
convenient ways
The heel and toe are at fault. zhǐ zhǒng xiāng cuò
be broad-minded toward others. kuān yǐ dài rén
to open or find a new path or snap course. lìng pì xī jìng