Clear and white? [ yī qīng èr bái ]?
Explanation: The metaphor is very innocent. The metaphor is also very clear.
From: Mao Dun's "After the Robbery" IV: "You still don't believe me? I have been here for half a year, and I have always been clear. " Zhou Libo's "Storm" Part I 7: "My surname Han's bridge is a bridge, and the road is a road, which is clear and white. I am afraid that no one will come to me."
Example: We only think that God remembers everything in his head every day. Unexpectedly, it was these poor men who remembered the good and evil for us. What a quick retribution!
Grammar: combined; As predicate, attribute and complement; With praise.
synonym
Spotless [y and ché né bé r? m]?
Explanation: It originally meant that when Buddhists practiced, they excluded material desires and kept their hearts clean. Now it generally refers to not being influenced by bad habits and bad atmosphere at all. It is also used to describe very clean and clean.
Said by: Tang Shi Daoshi's Fa Yuan Zhu Lin: "If the Bodhisattva walks in the dry earth mountain, the soil will not be enough, and it will come with the blue wind and blow through the earth mountain, making it scattered into dust, and even a dust will not reach the Buddha's body."
Grammar: subject-predicate type; As a predicate and attribute; Used for people and the environment.