follow with the eye and shake with the hand
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ù s ø ngsh ǒ Uhu ī, which means to use both hands and eyes. It also refers to the meaning of language pun, meaning beyond words. From "to my brother Cai Gong Mu to join the army.".
The origin of Idioms
Ji Kang, Wei of the Three Kingdoms, wrote a poem: "seeing GUI Hong off, waving five strings in hand, pitching and complacent, wandering in the dark."
Idiom usage
As a predicate; of a person's speech.
Examples
Mao Zedong deserves to be a good negotiator. No matter how complicated and arduous the situation is, he can see it off and tide over the difficulties. People
follow with the eye and shake with the hand
praise a person before everybody - féng rén shuō xiàng
be dreesed in fine clothes and ride on well-groomed horses - xiān yī nù mǎ
beautiful rivers and mountains of a country - dà hǎo hé shān