pure music
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh è ngsh ǐ zh ī y ī n, which means the trend of metaphysics in the Wei and Jin Dynasties. It appeared in the period of Wei Zhengshi of the Three Kingdoms. At that time, he Yan and Wang Bi were the leaders, and Lao Zhuang thought was combined with Confucian classics and righteousness. They talked about metaphysics and analyzed reason, and were unrestrained; they were famous and fashionable, and flourished in Luoxia. It also means pure music. It comes from the biography of Wei Li in the book of Jin.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Wei Li in the book of Jin: "in the past, the king's assistant son vomited gold in the middle Dynasty, and this son revived jade on the surface of the river. He had a subtle idea and continued to do so. At the end of Yongjia, I heard the beginning again. "
Idiom usage
Used as a subject or object; used in writing. How about it? Zhu Xianshu's temple songs of the Qing Dynasty. Singing and playing, sighing and sighing again and again, the music is light and the voice is not much. It's not easy to feel peace when you listen to it. (a poem by Bai Juyi in Tang Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : zhèng shǐ zhī yīn
pure music
A willing man is a willing man. gān mào hǔ kǒu
fortunes or misfortunes alternate. huò fú wú cháng
a pleasant day coupled with a fine landscape. liáng chén měi jǐng
The best use lies in one heart. yùn yòng zhī miào,zài yú yī xīn