undisturbed
Liugen Qingjing, a Chinese idiom, is Li ù g ē NQ ī NGJ ì ng in pinyin, which means that Buddhism regards Liugen Qingjing as a state of being far away from troubles, and it means that there is no desire. It comes from the Dharma Sutra: the master's merits and virtues.
Idiom explanation
Six roots: Buddhist language, refers to eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body, meaning.
The origin of Idioms
"Dharma Sutra · master's merit and virtue product" says: "so is merit and virtue, solemn six roots, all make quiet."
Idiom usage
The metaphor has no desire. example leave no grass, six roots quiet, and you shaved, so as not to compete. (the fourth chapter of Water Margin by Shi Naian in Ming Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : liù gēn qīng jìng
undisturbed
great literature and classical works. gāo wén dà cè
Words without words are not far from deeds. yán ér wú wén,xíng zhī bù yuǎn