a buddhist term
Liugen Qingjing, a Chinese idiom, is Li ù g ē NQ ī NGJ ì ng in pinyin, which means that Buddhism takes Liugen Qingjing as a way to get away from troubles. Metaphor has no desire. It comes from the wish of Baotai Sutra collection by Sui Yangdi.
interpretation
In Buddhist terms, it refers to cutting off the desire caused by the eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and mind, so as to achieve the state of no trouble and no annoyance.
The origin of Idioms
Sui Yangdi's Baotai Sutra collection wish: "all five kinds of mages have six roots of purity."
Idiom usage
There is no desire in metaphor
Examples
The fourth chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the Marsh: "no grass left, six roots clean, shaving with you, so as not to compete." Qian Yong's "Lu Yuan Cong Hua · Yi Lun · Yi Mo ru" says: "however, I think that after all, six roots are pure, so that we can establish the foundation of sages and sages. If we can have all five implications, then we can speak the way of benevolence and righteousness."
Chinese PinYin : liù gēn qīng jìng
a buddhist term
Beat the hub and rub the shoulder. jī gǔ mó jiān
The wind and rain are like a dish. fēng yǔ rú pán