a pure and noble character
A piece of ice heart, a Chinese idiom, pronounced y ī PI à Nb ī NGX ī n, means a clean heart, which refers to a person's pure, quiet and indifferent temperament. It's from "sending Xin Jian to furonglou".
Idiom explanation
A clean heart. It is used to describe a person who is indifferent to fame and fortune.
The origin of Idioms
During the Tang Dynasty, the poet Wang Changling was frustrated in officialdom, offended the powerful and powerful families, and was demoted again and again. However, he still masturbated with his transparent and pure heart, determined not to go along with those people. In his poem "sending Xin Jian to furonglou", he expressed such emotion: "cold rain connecting the river, night entering Wu, pingming seeing off Chu mountain alone. Luoyang relatives and friends such as ask, a piece of ice in the jade pot
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: a pure heart, a pure heart, a pure heart, a pure heart; Antonyms: lust for profit, dizziness, despicable and shameless
Idiom usage
It is formal; it is subject and object; it has commendatory meaning. In Liang Yuchun's six links to Shi Min Shu: "conscience (to nurse) is like a candle in front of the wind. It's a piece of ice. It's going to go to waste." The epitome of tea couplets is in Tian's hundred tea couplets: "it's easy to depict three parts of spring, but it's easy to comprehend a piece of ice heart." Fishing for sunshine and snow. Chen Bi's "four unique stories of diaotai" in Qing Dynasty. a heart of ice writes loyalty. an ice core water cube.
Chinese PinYin : yī piàn bīng xīn
a pure and noble character
rove among flowers and willows -- visit places brothels. xún huā mì liǔ
The thunder is too quick to stop. jí léi bù jí sāi ěr