Ding Dang has an ear
Ding Dang has ears, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǐ ngch ē ngy ǒ u ě R, which means that someone or something has a great influence. Anyone with long ears should hear and know. It comes from Wushui Ji Wen.
The origin of Idioms
In Su Shui Ji Wen written by Sima Guang of Song Dynasty, "Taizu favored Zhao Han Wang (PU) like a right hand. The censor, Leide, impeached Zhao Pu, who was good at collecting money and bribes from the imperial residence. He said angrily, "Ding Dang still has ears. Don't you hear about Zhao puwu's officials?"
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in rhetorical questions.
Ding Dang has an ear
roundness inside but squareness outside - wài fāng nèi yuán
under the moon and before the flowers - yuè xià huā qián
One slap won't make a sound - yī gè bā zhǎng pāi bù xiǎng
to show one 's determination to fight to the last - jì hé fén zhōu