be able to see what others cannot
Unique, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ú J ù zh ī y ǎ n, which means having unique vision and insight; it describes keen vision, able to see things that others are not easy to find, with superb insight. From "send Peng Yuanzhong County Cheng back to the north.".
The origin of Idioms
Yang Wanli's poem "seeing Peng Yuanzhong off to the north": Recently, he has a special eye and wants to step on the top of the Tang Dynasty.
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as predicate, attribute and object, with commendatory meaning and sharp vision. Lu Xun's "a talk on the wind and the moon: Postscript": This essay can't have a second sentence except for Mr. Qi Shi's praise of "having unique eyes".
Chinese PinYin : dú jù zhī yǎn
be able to see what others cannot
one 's heart ached as if pierced by ten thousand arrows. wàn jiàn cuán xīn
lose all standing and reputation. shēn bài míng huī
topple the mountains to crash the egg -- to cause a disaster to come. rú shān yā luǎn