pure
The Chinese idiom, Li ù ch é Nb ù R ǎ n in pinyin, means to exclude material desires and keep a clean heart. It comes from the monument of empress Xiaoming written by Wu Sansi of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Six dust-free, lonely mark water flowers. Tang Wu Sansi's the monument of empress Xiaoming
Idiom usage
"Monk" refers to "monk" when it is used as predicate and attributive; when it is used for people and environment, it shows that all the five implications are empty and the six are spotless. Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio, monk Jin
Analysis of Idioms
Clean and spotless
Chinese PinYin : liù chén bù rǎn
pure
summon up one 's courage for a task. chuō lì fēng fā