superhuman powers
Three heads and six arms, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā NSH ǒ Uli ù B ì, which means the shape of Shinto. Later, it refers to the great power and outstanding ability. From the romance of Fengshen by Xu Zhonglin of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
The shape of Shinto. After the metaphor of the vast, outstanding skills. The same as "three heads and six arms".
The origin of Idioms
The 63rd chapter of the romance of Fengshen written by Xu Zhonglin of Ming Dynasty: "Ziya sees a man in the opposite camp, with three heads and six arms, and blue face and tusks."
Analysis of Idioms
synonym: three heads and six arms antonym: nothing
Idiom usage
It is very sincere to serve the God of the local master. It looks like a skull with three heads and six arms.
Chinese PinYin : sān shǒu liù bì
superhuman powers
There's no place to go when you've broken your iron shoes. tàpò tiěxié wúmìchù,délái quánbù fèigōngfù
carriage drawn by four horses. jié sì lián qí
hide one 's troubles and take no remedial measures. huì jí jì yī