listen to only one side
Partial listening and partial believing, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is pi ā NT ī ngpi ā nx ì n, which means one-sided to listen to one side of the word to believe it is true, mostly refers to the attitude of dealing with things is unfair. From "on the hidden man, light and shade".
The origin of Idioms
In Wang Fu's Qian Fu Lun Ming and Yin of the Han Dynasty, it is said that "the reason why you are bright is that you listen to them at the same time; the reason why you are dark is that you believe in them."
Idiom usage
It refers to the attitude of doing things. He is always willing to listen to everyone's opinions and never partial to others. 2. Some leading cadres of Cangxian Bureau of industry and commerce did not conduct in-depth investigation, listened to and believed in Pang Zhenjiang, and took a series of wrong measures against Pang Zhenjiang: first, they revoked their licenses unreasonably and took stock accounts. 3. The ears of a deaf man who listens and believes. 4. The reasons for the tragedy of some failures: the farmers who are eager to get rich ignore the basic knowledge of medicine planting, and blindly listen to the "high price recovery" in the advertisement.
Idiom story
Li Shimin, Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty, appointed Wei Zheng as prime minister. He asked how Wei Zheng could become a wise emperor. Wei Zheng said that Yao and Shun were good at listening to various opinions, so they were wise and able to keep the world; he also said that Qin II, Liang Wu Emperor and Sui Yang emperor were partial to the truth, so they died. Emperor Taizong of Tang Dynasty thought that it was reasonable.
Chinese PinYin : piān tīng piāng xìn
listen to only one side
wink and make signs to one another. jǐ méi nòng yǎn