Two leaves cover one's eyes
The Chinese idiom Li ǎ ngy è y ǎ nm ù means to be blinded and unable to distinguish things. It comes from Liu Zhou's Liu Zi Xin Lun zhuanxue in the Northern Qi Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Zhou's "Liu Zi Xin Lun zhuanxue" in the Northern Qi Dynasty: "if you cover your eyes with two leaves, you will not see; if you fill your ears with two pearls, you will not hear."
Idiom usage
Be an object or attribute
Chinese PinYin : liǎng yè yǎn mù
Two leaves cover one's eyes
but it is all overgrown with rank grass. jū wéi mào cǎo
Eating meat with good clothes. yì jǐn shí ròu
To prosper in the shade of mountains. shān yīn chéng xīng