shortsighted and good-for-nothing person
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is f á NF ū R ò uy ǎ n, which means the metaphor lacks the eye of observing people. It also refers to ordinary knowledge. It comes from the Fahuajing and zanmaitreya four rites.
The origin of Idioms
"Fa Hua Jing" says: "ordinary people have shallow knowledge and deep five desires." In Tang Xuanzang's translation of the four rites of Maitreya, it is said that "a man who has not been recognized by the naked eye is a body of gold with a thousand feet."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to ordinary knowledge.
shortsighted and good-for-nothing person
willing to sacrifice life in case of danger - jiàn wēi zhì mìng
in the beginning of the heaven and the earth genesis - tiān zào cǎo mèi
he rooks everyone he can get his claws into - yàn guò bō máo