1, refers to Buddhists or Taoists, refers to the human world, the real world, as opposed to their fantasy paradise;
2, refers to the world; Secular refers to the world of mortals.
Pinyin: chén shì √.
Source: Tang? Yuan Zhen's poem "Dumen Temple": "Although the source of the heart goes, the world is bitter."
Interpretation:? In the words of Buddhism, the heart is the root of all laws, so it is called the source of the heart.
Extended data:
Synonyms: mortal, earthly, mortal, mortal, mortal, mortal, mortal, mortal, mortal, mortal.
1, mortal, pronounced fán jiān, earthly.
Quotation: "Dunhuang Quzi Ci Neijiajiao": "It should be the fairy palace of the Queen Mother, which is slightly real on earth.
2, secular, pronounced sú shì, generally refers to the world of mortals.
Quote: Jia's Notes on Zhou Lingwang: "There is a sound in the air, saying that heaven feels the birth of a child, so the sound of falling and cymbals is different from the secular."
3, the world, pronounced rén shì, the world, human society.
Quote: Tang anonymous Zheng Deyu: "[Shuifu] is like a family, no different from the world."
4, dust, pronunciation? Chén huán, Chinese vocabulary:
(1) in the world.
Two books.
Quote: Tang Quan Deyu? The poem "Send Li out of Songyang" says: "Go away, spring mountain osmanthus flowers."
5, the world of mortals, pronounced hóng chén, bilingual vocabulary:
The original meaning of the world of mortals in ancient times refers to a bustling city.
Quote: Ban Gu, a writer and historian in the Eastern Han Dynasty, wrote the poem "The Red Dust is four in one, and the sea of clouds is connected."
(2) refers to the bustling secular life in this world, which comes from the dirt roads in the past and the dust raised by horses passing by, and is a metaphor for the road to fame and fortune.
Baidu encyclopedia-human world