only confuse people's minds
In Chinese, Pinyin is t ú Lu à NR é NY à, which means that it only disturbs people's mood and has no other effect. It comes from Song Sushi's tablet of the God of Fu Zheng Gong.
The origin of Idioms
Su Shi of Song Dynasty wrote in the stele of the God of Fu Zheng Gong: "when I was ordered to hear about a female soldier, and then a boy, I did not care about it. I got a letter from my family, but burned it instead, saying:" it was in vain. "
Idiom usage
In Gao Yang's complete biography of Hu Xueyan, the second volume: "this is the so-called ~, Qiu Fengyan and Liu Bucai dare not speak any more."
only confuse people's minds
Spread your eyebrows and cover your eyes - pū méi shàn yǎn
Strengthen your forehead and tongue - jiān é jiàn shé
put one 's hand to one 's mouth to hide one 's laughter - yǎn kǒu hú lú