Listening and watching
Ti Ting Ya Shi, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ì t ī ngxi á sh ì, which means that the audio-visual range is far and wide. It comes from the book of the new Tang Dynasty, election records II.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
The origin of Idioms
"The new book of the Tang Dynasty election annals II:" the Holy Lord has a bright eye and a bright mind. He has a deep understanding of what he has heard. If he is guilty of taking the risk of committing an act carelessly, he will be condemned in a small way, punished in a big way, and appointed. Who dares not to encourage him? "
Listening and watching
deliberately embellish the facts - yǒu zhī tiān yè
keep one 's heart as hard as the nether millstone - xīn rú jiān shí
one word is as heavy as nine tripods - yī yán jiǔ dǐng