A man at a glance
People at a glance, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī m ù zh ī sh ì, which means people who have one-sided views and can't see things as a whole. It comes from the book of yueman Hall - miscellaneous notes of Zhiya hall.
The origin of Idioms
Li Ciming's yueman hall reading notes - miscellaneous notes of Zhiya hall in the Qing Dynasty: "this book was written in the Yuan Dynasty, and the wind of Taoism was very strong. It can be said that this is the public of right and wrong. It would be foolish for a man of modern age to denounce the Confucianists of the Song Dynasty as a crime of Mo bu. "
Idiom usage
Used as a subject or object; used in writing
A man at a glance
till my heart is weary , and my head aches - gān xīn shǒu jí
good fortune is often followed by calamity - fú guò zāi shēng
Seeking roots and pulling up trees - xún gēn bá shù
body gone and reputation ruined - shēn míng jù bài
crossing the sea under camouflage - mán tiān guò hǎi