heterodox doctrines
Heresy is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Xi é m ó w à ID à o, which means heresy and behavior that is harmful to the right way. It refers to opinions or doctrines that are not in line with orthodox ideas, and also refers to spirits or people with improper conduct. From the book of pharmacists.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of pharmacists" says, "I believe in the world's heresy and evil teachers, and say evil and good things in vain."
Idiom usage
As subject, object, attribute; refers to unorthodox theory. Yuan Wu Ming Shi's "shennuer. The fourth fold": you arrange the money and paper quickly, and the heresy should be stopped, and only the dead soul should be released. For the first time in Wu Jingzi's unofficial history of the scholars in the Qing Dynasty, if you don't pay attention to the eight part essay, whatever you do, it's wild fox Zen and heresy. Chapter 81 of Cao Xueqin's a dream of Red Mansions in the Qing Dynasty: just when the master came in, he said that Baoyu's godmother was a bastard.
Idiom story
Jia Baoyu put down her book and ran to her mother, who was talking about heresy with Wang Xifeng. Jia Baoyu immediately said that Aunt Zhao asked someone to make him and Wang Xifeng fall ill together. "I don't remember very much either," Wang said. But I feel like I can't help myself. It's like there's someone who wants me to kill. "
Chinese PinYin : xié mó wài dào
heterodox doctrines
Zhu Yun breaks the threshold. zhū yún shé jiàn
eat animal flesh raw and drink its blood. rú máo yǐn xuè