Listen to the wind and listen to the water
Listening to wind and water, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ī NGF ē NGT ī ngshu ǐ, which means to be good at enjoying natural scenery. It comes from the Ci of nishang by Wang Jian of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Examples
"Nishang Qu", a biography of previous life, is quite detailed. I don't know why I listen to wind and water. Bai Letian's "nishang song" is very detailed, and there is no geomantic omen theory. In the second record, there may be those who died.
The origin of Idioms
It is said that king kuci and musicians listen to the wind and water in the mountains and make music. One of Wang Jian's poems on nishang in the Tang Dynasty is: "all the disciples in the Department should listen to the wind and listen to the water to write nishang."
Idiom explanation
Good at enjoying the natural scenery.
Chinese PinYin : tīng fēng tīng shuǐ
Listen to the wind and listen to the water