be entirely absorbed
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ù B ù Xi é sh ì, which means that the eyes do not look to the side. To describe a person with grave eyes and serious expression. It comes from the family precepts of the Yan family, teaching children.
Analysis of Idioms
Look right and left
The origin of Idioms
Yan Zhitui's "Yan Family Precepts · Jiaozi" in the Northern Qi Dynasty: "in ancient times, the sage king had the method of fetal education. When he was pregnant with his son in March, he went out to live in a different palace. He didn't look evil, and his ears didn't listen rashly. His sound and taste were based on etiquette."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as predicate, attribute and adverbial; with commendatory meaning; with serious expression. Chapter 6 of Liu Qing's history of Entrepreneurship: "some of them have to turn around and have a look after they pass by. But it's a change. " In Qing Dynasty, Li Ruzhen's Jing Hua Yuan: "they all look at each other without strabismus and walk with their heads bent down." When the teacher explained, he looked at the words on the blackboard without squinting.
Chinese PinYin : mù bù xié shì
be entirely absorbed
Buy old cattle across the mountain. gé shān mǎi lǎo niú