unprecedented and unrepeatable
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Gu ā nqi á nju é h ò u, which means doing things cleanly without leaving any trace. It comes from the four strokes of Rongzhai, the story of Lantian Chengbi.
Idiom explanation
Light: vast. Absolutely: absolutely.
The origin of Idioms
In Song Hongmai's "four strokes of Rongzhai · the story of Lantian Chengbi", it is said that "diwenyou is extremely precipitous and has never been seen before. If you look at it with willows, it is almost as beautiful as a jade."
Idiom usage
It is a metaphor for doing things cleanly. The affairs of villains are all in the belly of the festival. Tonight, as long as it is unprecedented. (the 62nd chapter of the water margin by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty) (2) the deathbed verse by Zen master Shiwu Qinggong: "there is no stinking corpse in the green mountain, but we still need to dig the ground when we die. I don't have samadhi fire. I'm a pile of firewood. "
Chinese PinYin : guāng qián jué hòu
unprecedented and unrepeatable
Advocating emotion and thinking. chàng qíng yě sī