Seeing things but not people
Chinese vocabulary, pronounced Ji à NW à B à Ji à NR é n, means to see things but not people. It refers to one-sided emphasis on material conditions without the subjective initiative of human being.
essential information
The idiom "seeing things but not people" is pronounced as "seeing things but not people". It refers to one-sided emphasis on material conditions without the subjective initiative of human being.
explicate
Seeing things but not people, as an idiom, means seeing things but not people. It refers to one-sided emphasis on material conditions without the subjective initiative of human being. Example: "seeing things but not people" in scientific research is not conducive to the cultivation of talents.
Related words
I only listen to the stairs, but no one comes down. I'll prove it. I'll be ashamed to see it. I'll protect it. If I don't take anything, I'll lose a thousand miles. If I see gold, I'll lose a thousand miles. If I see people, I'll grab gold, I'll lose a thousand miles
English translation
beunabletoseethepeopleforthethings
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: only see things, not people. It refers to one-sided emphasis on material conditions without the subjective initiative of human being. Examples of idioms: we can't see things and people when we look at problems; degree of common use: common emotional color: commendatory words; grammatical usage: as predicate, attribute and object; idiom structure for handling affairs: combined type; generation time: Modern
Chinese PinYin : jiàn wù bù jiàn rén
Seeing things but not people
stand together through storm and stress. fēng yǔ tóng zhōu
A snake wants to swallow an elephant. shé yù tūn xiàng