A blind man
Blind wengmenyi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m á NGW ē NGM é NYU è, which means to judge things blindly only by one-sided understanding or local experience. From the Japanese metaphor.
The origin of Idioms
He who was born in the dark did not know the sun, and he who asked had a purpose. Or tell it: "the shape of the day is like a copper plate." The sound comes from the buckle. The next day, when I heard about Zhong, I thought it would be the same. Or tell it: "the light of the sun is like a candle." Touch the candle and get its shape. In the future, you will think that the sun is the same. The sun is far away from the sun, and the sun is far away from the sun. Su Shi's Japanese metaphor in Song Dynasty
Idiom usage
As an object or attributive, it means to look at a problem in a partial way
Examples
The blind Weng is like a man, and Ye Gong is good at Dragon. Zhao Yi's the song of Lu's stele in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Similar words: the blind man touches the candle, the blind man touches the candle
[rhyme words] he is crying for blood, miscarriage of justice, mischievous behavior, indifferent to others, a thousand Li dike, broken in an ant's nest, young and yellow sparrow, in the river and lake, with his heart hanging in the Wei que, regardless of everything, small punishment and big precepts, and the lower world of the heavenly king
A blind man
be helpless and in the greatest straits - jì qióng lì jí
A hundred tricks make a poor man - bǎi qiǎo chéng qióng
there were snakes and vipers creeping around among the dragons -- the high and low were mixed together - lóng shé hùn zá