Golden elixir
Jindanhuangu, a Chinese idiom, is a Pinyin of J ī nd ā nhu à ng ǔ, which means that the poet's creation has entered a state of insight with profound attainments. It comes from the poem "night chant" by Lu You of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Lu You's poem "night chant" in Song Dynasty: "I have studied poetry in vain for more than 60 years, and I only know it from the deep. When you smile at night, under the cold lamp, it's time to change the bone. " Qian Zhonglian proofread and noted: "the golden elixir changes the bone and cloud, which is covered with a metaphor for learning poetry from gradual cultivation to the realm of insight."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Chinese PinYin : jīn dān huàn gǔ
Golden elixir
cheerful countenance and contented appearance. yí yán yuè sè
leave a good name for posterity. bǎi shì liú fēn
a lively dragon and an active tiger. shēng lóng huó hǔ
deep favour and weighty righteousness. ēn shēn yì zhòng