have one mind
Nianhua smile, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ni ā nhu ā w ē IXI à o, which means that it was originally a Buddhist language and refers to a thorough understanding of Zen. The latter metaphors agree with each other. It comes from the Sutra of the great Vatican asking the Buddha.
The origin of Idioms
"The great Vatican king asked the Buddha to decide on the Scripture:" at that time, the great Vatican King led some of his family members to offer the Buddha to the golden Brahma, and each of them saluted the Buddha's feet and sat back one side. At that time, the Buddha offered the golden Brahma, raised his eyebrows in a blink, and showed the public that he did not know what to do. There is a smile on the face of Kaya. "
Idiom usage
When you do it at home, you feel like it's a kiss; when others look at it and see it, it's a coincidence. The 100th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : niān huā wēi xiào
have one mind
get rid of sb . as soon as he has done his job. xiè mò shā lǘ
The peach and the plum are self-evident, and they make their own way. táo lǐ bù yán,xià zì chéng háng
store up gems and pile up gold. jī yù duī jīn
come down in one continuous line. yī mài xiāng chéng