Idiom: He who sees through the world of mortals
Pinyin: kàn p hong chén
Short spell: kphc
Explanation: The old one refers to a negative attitude towards life that sees through life and ignores the joys and sorrows of life and death. Now it also refers to the attitude of passive escape and inaction after setbacks.
Source: Han's "Journey to the West": "The city overflows the country and flows for hundreds of miles, and the red dust is mixed."
The old man told the whole family not to feel bad. Liu Qing's Entrepreneurial History Inscription
Synonym: All four are empty, uncontroversial and detached.
Antonym: family happiness
Grammar: as predicate and attribute; Point out that this family is a monk.
He who sees through the world of mortals idioms solitaire
Follow-up: dirt, chaff, dust, chaff, dust, wild horse dust, dust, dust, dust, brake, dust, soup, rice.
Shunjie: Ibn Chen Jue Ibn Chen Jue sowed dust, not stained with dust, followed in the footsteps of others, transcendent Chen Jue, transcendental Chen Jue, blowing shadows and carving dust.
Reverse connection: Look at the Buddha with white eyes and look at him with new eyes, and look at him with cold eyes and look at him with new eyes.
Reverse connection: I don't like people's eyes, people's eyes, people's actions, people's words and skills.
He who sees through the world of mortals idiom 2
Athena Chu Kan Peng Chen
Dong Xiaowan, a geisha in Jinling, married Mao Bijiang in the early Qing Dynasty. After the Qing soldiers captured Hangzhou, Hong Chengchou, governor of Liangjiang, snatched her away and gave her to the emperor shunzhi for tribute. Shunzhi liked her very much, locked her up in Lan Xin Palace and gave her wealth, but she still couldn't get her heart. Sourdrang dowager killed Dong Xiaowan, and the emperor shunzhi, who sees through the world of mortals, resolutely became a monk.
The allusion is that the city overflows the country, Fiona Fang is a hundred miles away, the world of mortals is four-in-one, and the clouds are even.
Han's Xijing Fu
Explaining the old refers to a negative attitude towards life that sees through life and ignores the joys and sorrows of life and death. Now it also refers to the attitude of passive escape and inaction after setbacks.
Used as predicate and attribute; Point out that this family is a monk.
Four similar words are empty, undisputed and detached.
Antonym family happiness
Examples of idioms
But some of our young people are not like this. Thought decadent and depressed, euphemistically called "he who sees through the world of mortals". They are rude in speech, simple and rude in behavior, and pursue strange clothes in dress, regardless of beauty and ugliness.