look at for a long time but not to see anything
Turn a blind eye to, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is sh ú sh ì w ú D ǔ, used to see but like not see the same. It is used to describe carelessness or indifference to things. It comes from Ode to wine by Liu Ling of Jin Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
It's not uncommon. Turn a blind eye and turn a deaf ear.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Ling of Jin Dynasty wrote in his ode to wine: "listen to the thunder but not hear it, look at it and not see the shape of Mount Tai." Han Yu, Tang Dynasty, the book of time and people in response to subjects
Idiom usage
Be used to; be used to. You can't add an object. examples to look at for a long time but not to see anything.
look at for a long time but not to see anything
everything in good order and well arranged - yǒu tiáo bù wěn
thousands and thousands of words - qiān yán wàn yǔ
throw away their armor and trail their weapons behind them - qì jiǎ yè bīng