flawless
Seamless clothes, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ú f è ngTi ā NY ī, which means that there is no flaw in poetry and other things. It's from Guo Han, the ghost record.
Idiom explanation
The myth says that the celestial clothes worn by fairies need not be sewn with needle and thread. It is often used as a metaphor that there is no flaw in poetry and other things.
The origin of Idioms
Guo Han, the book of spirits and monsters written by Niu Qiao in the pre Shu period of the Five Dynasties: "Tianyi is not needle and thread."
Idiom usage
It is often used in figurative sentences
Examples
The third chapter of the complete biography of eight immortals by Taoist Wugui in Qing Dynasty: "just like ~, you can't see any trace."
Chinese PinYin : wú féng tiān yī
flawless
be toughened and hardened into steel. bǎi liàn chéng gāng
solicit help from potential backers high and low. zuān tóu mì fèng
favours weighty as a mountain. ēn dé rú shān