extreme penalty
Jianshudaoshan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin Ji à NSH à D à OSH à n, means the punishment of hell in Buddhism, and describes the extremely cruel punishment. From Taiping Guangji.
The origin of Idioms
Pei zezi, volume 382 of Taiping Guangji, quoted Ming Bao Shi Yi as saying, "at the third gate, you can see wok soup and sword trees."
Analysis of Idioms
Sword mountain and sword tree
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's an object and an attribute. example I'm not afraid of her knife, even jianshudaoshan. The seventh chapter of Wenkang's biography of heroes and heroines in Qing Dynasty says: "how is law?" The teacher said, "sword tree and sword mountain." (song · Shi Puji's wudenghuiyuan, Volume 15) Qing Dynasty Hongsheng's changshengdian · mingzhui: "traitor, I've come to take you by the order of the king of hell, and I'm not going to go I'll teach you to go to jianshudaoshan to have fun. "
Chinese PinYin : jiàn shù dāo shān
extreme penalty
turn back to hit those who misled. fǎn gē yī jī
insatiably covetous and gluttonous. tān yù wú yàn
encourage monsters to stalk abroad , making trouble , causing disorder. xīng yāo zuò luàn