As you can see
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ú Ji à NF è Ig à n, which means to see through the lung and liver. People can see clearly what they think in their hearts. From the book of rites · University.
Analysis of Idioms
[Tongyun CI] unexpected abyss, holding the sky in one hand, choking to stop eating, falling on paper, walking through snow and snow, committing great crimes, turning the tiger away from the mountain, keeping calm, biting the snow and swallowing the carpet, enforcing the law like a mountain
Analysis of Idioms
"The book of rites · Da Xue" says, "if you see your lung and liver, what's the benefit?"
Idiom story
In the Western Han Dynasty, Dai Sheng explained the meaning of sincerity in the book of rites. He thought that if a person really has sincerity, he must be cautious. A man who is not careful to be alone does all kinds of evil behind his back. When he meets a sincere gentleman, he wants to cover up his crimes. But he doesn't know that when people look at him, they can't cover up his crimes.
Idiom usage
It can be seen clearly. The fourth chapter of Huang Xiaopei's "damabian" in Qing Dynasty: "Nai Yucheng regarded him as if he saw his heart, let him talk too much, and always turned a deaf ear."
As you can see
incur a considerable or great expense - suǒ fèi bù zī
the world is but a little place , after all - tiān yá zhǐ chǐ
full of ideas for state policy agnosia - jīng shén mǎn fù