The wind in my ear
The wind in the ear, Chinese vocabulary.
Pinyin: birbi @ NF @ ng
Interpretation: it refers to hearing other people's words but not seeing them.
Citation explanation
The wind in my ear. It's like listening to something you don't care about. In Zhao Ye's Wu Yue spring and Autumn Annals, a dream of Wu Wang Shou, it is said that "wealth is to me like the autumn wind." Du Xunhe of Tang Dynasty wrote a poem: "a hundred years old has a limit, the snow on the head, all kinds of things are not stained by the wind." The second discount of Yuan Wu Ming Shi's struggle for gratitude: "I don't want to drink, I don't want to be greedy; I don't want to be aggressive, I don't want to be evil. That girl is gossiping, I just listen to him, and he'll be there! Take care of it Chapter 8 of Cao Xueqin's a dream of Red Mansions in Qing Dynasty: what I tell you on weekdays is all in my ears. How can you follow what he says, faster than the imperial edict? Li Baojia's Officialdom: I'm talking about the secret of diplomacy. Don't take it as an example
usage
To be formal; to be an object; to refer to words that you don't care about when you hear them
words whose meaning is similar
Turn a deaf ear to
Xiehouyu
The East ear goes in and the West ear goes out
example sentence
In fact, it's autumn wind.
Chinese PinYin : ěr biān fēng
The wind in my ear
How can you let others snore on your couch. wò tà zhī shàng,qǐ róng tā rén hān shuì
be kind and have not enough courage to. xīn cí shǒu ruǎn