there are too many things for the eye to take in
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ù B ù Xi á J ǐ, which means too many things to see. It comes from the new words of the world.
Idiom explanation
Leisure: leisure. To: supply.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, wrote in the new sayings of the world: from the mountain to the vagina, the mountains and rivers meet each other, making people overwhelmed
Idiom usage
It is used after "Ren Ren". I can see that it is not just the joy of a cage and a feather. The preface of Zheng Xie's Weixian Shuzhong and shedi Mo in Qing Dynasty and Wu Yu's complete biography of flying dragon in Qing Dynasty: "so I searched the biography of flying dragon, which was contemptible at that time, deleted its complicated articles, eliminated its slang sentences, spread the style of elegant precepts, and used the words of Qing Dynasty to convey the spirit and write things. It was so beautiful that readers were surprised and couldn't see enough!"
Chinese PinYin : mù bù xiá jǐ
there are too many things for the eye to take in
to live long and have unending good fortune. tiān bǎo jiǔ rú
never will there be days of peace. yǒng wú níng rì
Tiger throwing and dragon taking. hǔ zhì lóng ná
Cast the new and wash out the old. zhù xīn táo jiù
fight a hundred battles , win a hundred victories. bǎi zhàn bǎi shèng