Eyes and ears
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is m ù R ǔ RR ǎ n, which means to be infected and influenced by frequent contact between eyes and ears. It comes from tablet inscription of Gongfang cemetery in Qinghe County.
Idiom explanation
The two pronunciations are different. Ru is two tones, while he is three tones. Due to frequent contact with the eyes and ears and affected by infection. It is also called "being influenced by one's ears", "being influenced by one's eyes", "being influenced by one's eyes" and "being influenced by one's ears".
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu's tablet inscription of Qinghe County Public Housing cemetery in the Tang Dynasty: "if you look at something, you can't learn."
Idiom usage
Be affected unconsciously
Eyes and ears
There are many branches and leaves - zhī bù yè fēn
after meal hours or in leisure time - jiǔ hòu chá yú
have experienced all sorts of hardships - jiǔ jīng fēng shuāng
forsake heresy and return to the truth - jiǎo xié guī zhèng
the enemy approached the walls - bīng lín chéng xià
A bull's head is not a horse's mouth - niú tóu bù duì mǎ zuǐ
The white head returned in vain - bái shǒu kōng guī