be moved by what one sees
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji à NJ à ngsh à ngq í ng, which means to see the scenery in front of you and arouse some emotion. It also refers to seeing the scene in front of you and thinking of ways to deal with it, that is, to be flexible. From qilitan.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of qilitan was used by Gong DA in Yuan Dynasty: "I can't help seeing scenery and feeling, seeing things and feeling sad."
Idiom usage
It's the same as "feeling the scene". Chapter 7 of the chronicles of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty: "the Duke of Zheng, seeing the scene and feeling, made a plan, and then said," I was forced by the king's order to punish you. If I were to benefit his land, it would not be a righteous act. Although Xu Jun fled today, his world worship can not be extinct. Since his younger brother is here, and there is a doctor Xu to entrust, and there is a king and a minister, he should return with Xu. " Chapter 97 of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in Qing Dynasty: "thanks to his resourcefulness and resourcefulness, he came up with a way."
be moved by what one sees
a runaway horse gallops so fast that it leaves no trace - bēn yì jué chén
one is long and the other is short - yī cháng yī duǎn
curry favour with those in power - yī kuàng fù mù
every cent goes into the public account - juān dī guī gōng