Blindfolded
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ū m é im é ngy ǎ n, which means pretending. From scholars.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 28 of Wu Jingzi's unofficial history of the scholars in the Qing Dynasty: "wearing cocoon silk clothes, holding a few pearls in hand, he walked out blindfolded."
Idiom usage
To act as a predicate or attribute. The 50th chapter of "Jin Ping Mei" written by Ming Lanling Xiaosheng: "I saw that he was blindfolded, made a show of his own style, and was very literal. I only called him master Xue at a time."
Blindfolded
Take the essentials and cut them out - jǔ yào shān wú
Burn the boat and break the cauldron - fén zhōu pò fǔ