1. Poems about women’s chastity
Poems about women’s chastity 1. Verses or idioms that describe ancient women who took chastity very seriously
1 . Keep one's integrity like jade [ shǒu shēn rú yù ]
Maintain integrity and be as white and flawless as jade. It also generally refers to taking care of your body.
Source "Mencius Li Lou Shang": "Who is not guarding? Guarding yourself is the foundation of guarding."
2. Keep oneself clean [jié shēn zì hào]
Keep yourself pure and don't mix with others. It also refers to being afraid of causing trouble, only caring about one's own good, and not caring about public affairs.
Source "Yanzi Chunqiu Neipian Wen Shang": "Keep one's body clean and keep the Tao; unlike the world, people fall into evil." Guo Moruo's "Hongbo Qu·Nanjing Impression·14": "Like Boyi and Shuqi; He neither agrees with King Zhou of Yin nor King Wu of Zhou; that kind of self-righteous attitude seems to be untenable."
3. Take care of yourself [dú shàn qí shēn]
Du: Only; good: good, maintenance. The original intention is to cultivate yourself well if you can't become an official. Now it means only caring about yourself and not caring about others.
Source: "Mencius: Devoting Your Mind to the Heart". "If you are poor, you can be good for yourself; if you are rich, you can help the world."
4. Spotless [yī chén bù rǎn]
Originally refers to the way Buddhists eliminate material desires and keep their hearts pure when practicing. Now it generally refers to not being affected by bad habits or bad atmosphere at all. Also used to describe very clean and tidy.
Source: Song Zhang Lei’s poem “Plum Blossoms in the Back Garden after a Light Snow in the First Layer of Latxia”: “One spot is spotless and fragrant to the bone; Gushe’s immortal style reveals one’s body.”
5. One pure and two white [ yī qīng èr bái ]
The metaphor is very innocent. The metaphor is also very clear.
Source: Mao Dun's "Collection of Relics after the Disaster" IV: "Don't you still believe me? I have been here for half a year and I have always been clean." Part I of Zhou Libo's "The Storm" VII: "My surname is Han's bridge is a bridge, and the road is a road, and it is clear and clear. I am afraid that someone will mislead me."
2. I want to find some ancient views and sentences about women's chastity, such as Confucius's words< /p>
"Book of Changes": "A woman's chastity lasts forever."
"Book of Rites": "If you keep up with it, you will never change it throughout your life."
Wang Zhuo said in Sima Qian's "Historical Records·Tian Dan Biography": "A chaste woman never changes her husband to another husband."
Liu Xiang's "Biography of a Martyr Woman": "A righteous husband and a chaste woman, for example, will get a Jingbiao. They will be appointed at an early age. , isolated from each other, for decades, they have maintained their righteousness and cherished their loyalty, and they have fought against each other to pay for their losses. This has never happened before, and they should be rewarded for their loyalty. "
Ban Zhao " "The Analects of Women": "The husband has the right to remarry, and the wife has no suitable articles."
Song Ruohua's "The Analects of Women": "Don't turn your head when walking, don't lift your lips when speaking, don't move your knees when sitting, don't stand up Shake your skirt, don't laugh when you are happy, don't shout when you are angry. "
Volume 22 of Cheng Hao and Cheng Yi's "Henan Cheng Family's Posthumous Letters": "Death by starvation is a small matter, but a breach of integrity is a big deal."< /p>
3. Idioms describing women’s chastity
Jiuli Sanzhen: chastity; Lie: chastity. Feudal society used it to praise women's virtuousness.
Source: The third fold of "Contract Text" by Anonymous Yuan Dynasty: "She Yuanlai is a virtuous woman of Jiuli Sanzhen, an old man who still says that she will follow her husband when she marries."
Three Zhen and Nine Lies: chastity; Lie: chastity. Feudal society used it to praise women's virtuousness.
Source: The third fold of "Contract Text" by Anonymous Yuan Dynasty: "She Yuanlai is a virtuous woman of Jiuli Sanzhen, an old man who still says that she will follow her husband when she marries."
Starving to death is a small matter, but losing integrity is a big deal: originally it refers to a woman losing her virginity in feudal ethics, but later it generally refers to losing her moral integrity. Dying from poverty and starvation is a small matter, but losing integrity is a big deal.
Source: "Er Cheng Quanshu·Suicide Note 22": "Also asked: 'Maybe there are orphans and widows who are poor and have no support, can they remarry?' He said: 'It's just that future generations are afraid of cold and starvation, so Yes, it is a small thing to die from starvation, but a huge thing to be unruly!
4. Please provide as many idioms or four-letter words as possible to describe a girl’s chastity or clean body.
Yu Jie Bing Qing
Pinyin: yù jié bīng qīng
Explanation: As white as jade, as pure as ice, describing a pure heart and good conduct.
Source: Han Dynasty Huan Tan's "Xinlun·Wangxia": "Boyi Shuqi, pure and pure, did not become the heir of Guzhu because of his righteousness, did not eat Zhou millet, and died of starvation in Shouyang. ”
Example: If I have used my hands and feet, I can’t jump out of the circle even if I have three virtues and nine virtues.
★Qing Dynasty·Li Ruzhen's "Flowers in the Mirror" Chapter 12
Synonyms: ice-pure jade, white jade flawless
Grammar: used as an attributive; refers to character
ice-pure jade
Pinyin: bīng qīng yù jié
Explanation: As clear and transparent as ice, as white and flawless as jade. It is a metaphor for a person's pure conduct (mostly used for women).
Source: Han Dynasty Sima Qian's "Book of Letters to Zhi Boling": "Fu Wei Boling's talent is outstanding, his ambition is noble, his body is good, his body is pure and jade, and he does not behave in detail."
Example: As soon as I leave~, the clerk will come back and let you cheer for him. ★Wedge of "Chenzhou Rice" by Anonymous Yuan Dynasty
Synonyms: ice clear and jade, water clean and ice clear
Antonyms: a brief taste of it
Grammar: predicate , adverbial; describing noble character and pure conduct
Ice clear jade Run
Pinyin: bīng qīng yù rùn
Explanation: Run: nourish. As crystal clear as ice, as moist as jade. It originally refers to the pure conduct of the two sons-in-law of Wei and Jie in Leguang, Jin Dynasty. It is often used as a metaphor for people's noble character.
Source: Liu Yiqing of the Southern Dynasties and Song Dynasty, "Shishuo Xinyu·Yu", Liu Xiao's annotation quoted from "Wei Jie Farewell": "Pei Shudao said: "My wife's father has the appearance of ice and clearness, and my son-in-law has the beauty of jade. see. ”
Example: Liu Yiqing of the Southern Dynasties and Song Dynasty, "Shishuo Xinyu·Yu", Liu Xiao annotated and quoted from "Wei Jie Farewell": "Pei Shudao said: "My wife and father have a pure appearance, and my son-in-law has a jade." Hope."
Synonyms: Bingqing Yujie
Grammar: used as predicate and attributive; refers to character
Shuijie Bingqing
Pinyin :shuǐ jié bīng qīng
Explanation: as white and pure as ice water. Describe noble character or elegant writing style.
Source: Jin Dynasty Zhang Hua's "Wei Liu Qi Qi Wei": "The diamond is moist, the water is clean and ice-clear, the rich literary color is like the glory of the morning."
Synonyms: Bingqingyujie
Grammar: used as predicates and adverbials; mostly used for character and conduct, etc.
5. What are the idioms that describe "girls' chastity" or "clean bodies"
< p> Keep one's body like jadeIce pure and jade clean
Ice pure and jade moist
Water clean and ice clear
Clean one's body and take care of oneself
An explanation :
To keep oneself as pure as jade: shǒu shēn rú yù, to maintain integrity and be as white and flawless as jade. It also generally refers to taking care of your body.
Bingqingyujie: bīzhing qīng yù jié, as clear and transparent as ice, as white and flawless as jade. It is a metaphor for a person's pure conduct (mostly used for women).
Bingqingyurun: bīng qīng yù rùn, Run: moisturizing. As crystal clear as ice, as moist as jade. It originally refers to the pure conduct of the two sons-in-law of Wei and Jie in Leguang, Jin Dynasty. It is often used as a metaphor for people's noble character.
Shuijie Bingqing: shuǐ jié bīng qīng, as white and pure as ice water. Describe noble character or elegant writing style.
jié shēn zì hào means to keep oneself pure and not to be tainted.
Second sentence:
1. They concluded that for young single Americans, the modern rules of romantic engagement "clearly favor" and punish men. Women who want to get married--especially those who want to stay safe for the sake of marriage.
2. The pure and pure character of plum blossoms is admirable!
3. He is pure and pure, how can he be willing to follow the crowd?
4. How could she be with such a clean person?
5. Because they have an unusual spirit: brave, perseverance, tenacity, not afraid of difficulties, and clean themselves.