have one 's eyes open throughout the night
Blindfolded, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ù B ù Ji ā Oji é, meaning no eyelids closed. It describes not sleeping or not sleeping at night. It comes from the biographies of Yuan ang and Chao CuO in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
"When your majesty lived in Dai Dynasty, the Empress Dowager tasted illness. In three years, your majesty did not cross his eyelashes and undress," said Xun Yue of Han Dynasty
Idiom usage
Not sleeping or not sleeping at night. Example: when you are angry, you are dazed and unable to see each other. (the biography of Li wa by Bai Xingjian in Tang Dynasty) and the epitaph of Yuan Gong (yuan kelizi, Yuan Shu) who participated in politics in Henan Province in Ming Dynasty by Tian Lanfang in Qing Dynasty: "every seven days and nights, you can't see each other, and your eyes are full of sores
Discrimination of words
Snoring like thunder
Chinese PinYin : mù bù jiāo jié
have one 's eyes open throughout the night
with one's face towards the sky. yǎng miàn cháo tiān
attract too much attention and invite trouble. zhāo fēng rě yǔ
fail to find a solution due to grievance. dào xīn shī tú
Consider the past and the present. zhuó gǔ cān jīn