too many things for the eye to see
There are too many things to see: during the Spring Festival, there are so many artistic programs. It's also said that there are too many things to see.
Main understanding
Leisure: leisure; then: reception. There are so many things to describe that you can't see them. [usage] subject predicate; used as predicate, attribute and adverbial; mostly used after "Renren". [example] Qin Mu's Chrysanthemum and goldfish: "the same is true of all arts. Monotony inevitably leads to boredom. The vast majority of people welcome the colorful and dazzling reception. "
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Too busy_ see things in a blur. In the Music Bookstore, records and tapes are overwhelming. [source] "King Zhuang of Chu wants to invade Yue" in the Southern Song Dynasty, Liu Yiqing's "new sayings of the world · speech": "from the mountains and rivers, the mountains and rivers reflect each other, making people overwhelmed." Zheng Xie of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the second chapter of Weixian Shuzhong and shedi Mo: "when you see the color of huizhencai, you can see it coming and going
Chinese PinYin : mù bù xiá jiē
too many things for the eye to see
have no means to borrow money. gào dài wú mén
like nature itself -- highest quality. hún rán tiān chéng
a pewter spearhead that shines like silver-an impressive looking but useless person. yín yàng là qiāng tóu
The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak. xīn yǒu yú ér lì bù zú
Chew the palate and beat the bed. jiáo è chuí chuáng
To be burdened with worldly affairs. fù sú zhī lèi