What idioms are there about "soul"?

The daylights out of me [hún fēi pò sàn]: It describes being terrified, so scared that even my soul flies away from my body.

Charming [gūu hún shèpê]: describes things as having great attraction or deterrence.

Destroy the soul [hún xiāo pò duó]: describes panic and extreme fear.

Three souls and seven spirits [sā n hú n q and pò]: the spirit attached to the body of the living.

Ice soul snow [bρng húnxuěp222]: refers to ice soul snow, such as the transparency of ice and the whiteness of snow.

Out-of-body experience [yí hún wáng pò]: It means giving up one's thoughts and stopping one's mental activities.

Chasing the soul [Zhu chún shèpê]: refers to taking the soul and dying.

Soul-stirring [chí hún dàng pò]: It is interpreted as shocking the soul.

Lose one's mind [[wá ng hú n sà ng pê]]: describes being very scared or upset.

Enchanting [mí hún yín pò]: It describes the beauty of things and makes people intoxicated.

Soul, pinyin: [hunpò]

Interpretation: The old name refers to the spiritual atmosphere attached to the human body, commonly known as the human body has three souls and seven spirits.

Make sentences:

Flowers are reborn as small flowers, growing up slowly with broken souls and dull minds.

Jade is incomplete, scattered everywhere, turned into a soul, and found ice and shelter.

Snow-white skin, red and tender mouth and a pair of phoenix eyes can hook your soul.

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