To the eye
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ù m ù J ī NGX ī n, meaning to see and haunt. It comes from Gan Chun by he Dafu of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
He Dafu's poem "feeling spring" in the Ming Dynasty: "the scenery is not evil, but bitter."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or object; used of people or things.
To the eye
spread embroidered stories and malicious gossip - fēi duǎn liú cháng
suffering from both poverty and sickness - pín bìng jiāo qīn
neither the old nor the young will be cheated - tóng sǒu wú qī