be attracted to each other
It is a Chinese idiom, and the Pinyin is zh ē NJI è zh ī t ó u, which means that the needle is drawn by a magnet and the mustard is picked up by amber, because it is congruent with each other. It's from the book of friendship.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Menglei's book of breaking up friendship in Qing Dynasty said: "every time we explore and analyze the micro, we are extremely rational. We ignore the morning and evening, and we call it a shot in the arm, and the common son will always do it."
Idiom usage
Used as an object; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : zhēn jiè zhī tóu
be attracted to each other
Wine sickness and flower sorrow. jiǔ bìng huā chóu
feel faint and vision blurred. mù xuàn tóu hūn
surrender one 's power to another at one 's own peril. tài ē dào chí