The heart and the eyes
It is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ó NGX ī NGU ì m ù, which means to work hard for words. It comes from Li Dongyang's the same year's sacrifice to Zhang Heng's father.
The origin of Idioms
Li Dongyang of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the same year's sacrifice to Zhang Heng's father: "when he was in a daze, he was out of spirits, arrogant and arrogant, unprecedented."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, adverbial; often used in figurative sentences
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: liver and kidney, heart and kidney, heart and blood
Chinese PinYin : tóng xīn guì mù
The heart and the eyes
a loss may turn out to be a gain. sài wēng zhī mǎ
summon wind and call for rain. hū fēng huàn yǔ
suffer from an unrighted wrong or grievance. fù qū hán yuān