Looking to the East, you can't see the west wall
Looking east, no west wall is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is d à ngxi à ng é RW à ng, B à Ji à nx à Qi á ng, which means looking east, no west wall. Metaphor is subjective and one-sided.
Idiom explanation
Looking to the East, you can't see the wall to the West. Metaphor is subjective and one-sided.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: Lu's spring and Autumn Annals, quzaizi: "if you look to the East, you can't see the west wall; if you look to the south, you can't see the north, and you have a meaning."
Discrimination of words
For example, when you meet yourself, you will be satirized. When people and I are abandoned, they will hold their own corner. If they want to simulate the changes of the ten thousand ends, they will look to the East, but they will not see the west wall. "Wen Xin Diao Long · Zhi Yin" by Liang and Liu Xie in Southern Dynasties
Chinese PinYin : dōng xiàng ér wàng ,bù jiàn xī qiáng
Looking to the East, you can't see the west wall
as easy as to turn one 's hand. yì rú fǎn zhǎng
birds of a feather flock together. rén yǐ qún fēn