see things in a blur
Dazzled is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǎ nhu ā Li á olu à n, describes the eyes see complex things and feel confused. Metaphors are complex and cannot be distinguished. From the romance of the Western chamber.
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; as predicate, attribute, complement; describe things complex. Kuang Da was so shocked by what he said that his whole body was crisp, and he always said what he said. Chapter 20 of Wu Jingzi's unofficial history of the scholars in the Qing Dynasty 2. Selected from Shen Shixi's impala flying across the mountains: "then a pair of impala leaped up in the air, drawing dazzling arcs over the mountains." Chapter 38 of flowers in the mirror by Li Ruzhen of the Qing Dynasty: except for the kings we have been to, there are many strange shapes in them. It seems that I can't understand them. (4) Chapter 22 of three swordsmen and five righteousness by Shi Yukun in Qing Dynasty: at first, the body turned with the sword, but it could be noticed; later, it was dazzling.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] dizzy, dizzy, confusing and confusing [antonym] at a glance
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of the first book of the romance of the Western chamber by Wang Shifu of the Yuan Dynasty: "it's rare to see Pang er who is so lovely. He only teaches people to be dazzled and speechless. His soul has been flying for a long time."
Chinese PinYin : yǎn huā liáo luàn
see things in a blur
blow on an instrument or finger a stringed instrument. pǐn zhú diào xián
the whole nation becomes mad. jǔ guó ruò kuáng
move in and out with wizardly elusiveness. shén lóng jiàn shǒu bù jiàn wěi
take instant advantage of an opportunity that comes only once in a long while. mù tù gù quǎn