be moved by what one sees
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ù J ǐ ngsh ē ngq í ng, which means to be touched by the scene in front of you, to cause Association and to produce certain feelings. It comes from Yuan Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's boudoir resentment.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan · Wu Mingshi "boudoir resentment" Song: "wind, blow out the residual lamp, can't help but see the scene, sad."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attributive, or adverbial; used to evoke memories. [example] when people are in ~, they can think of many past events.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] touching things, feeling when seeing the scene, feeling when touching the scene antonym] indifference
be moved by what one sees
Learning is like climbing a mountain - xuá rú dēng shān
the hearts come together across the land - shuài tǔ zhái xīn