expect to see someone who never comes
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w à ngy à NJI à ngchu à n, which means that the eyes are about to see through. From Ji Wei Zhi.
The origin of Idioms
Bai Juyi of the Tang Dynasty wrote a poem "Ji Wei Zhi": "the white head chants and changes, and the blue eyes look through."
Analysis of Idioms
I'm looking forward to it
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attributive, adverbial; used to look forward to people.
Examples
Song Pan Lang's "jiuquanzi" CI: "the towers are clustered on the island of dubeng, and the savages are only old among them. It's been 20 years since I came here. I'll see you through. "
In Ming Dynasty, Feng Menglong's Xingshi Hengyan (Volume 28), "for several days, Pan Sheng was about to see through, but he didn't get it."
Chinese PinYin : wàng yǎn jiāng chuān
expect to see someone who never comes
the pain penetrates even into the marrow. tòng rù gǔ suǐ
achieve success with original ideas. chū qí qǔ shèng
gain victory with unstained swords. bīng wú xuè rèn
act recklessly and care for nobody. hèng wú jì dàn
think of stealing on seeing sb . 's money. jiàn cái qǐ yì
be very hard up , and in fact ) be at a loose end. shí guāi yùn guāi