a glance from a corner
In a word, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is y ī y ú zh ī Shu ō, which means one-sided statement; prejudice. It comes from the biography of Wang Chong in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Wang Chong and others in the book of later Han Dynasty, it is said that "it is necessary to study the loss and gain of the words of several sons in the world, but there are many fallacies in the training of Tongfang, so it is good to apply the theory of a corner." Li Xianzhu: "a corner means a bias."
Idiom usage
As an object; of prejudice. "Example" or "reward makes people feel better. If you don't reward first, people won't use it for me." It's not a general theory. Song Suxun's "on the balance · the Imperial General"
a glance from a corner
avoid the solid and strike the weak - bì shí jī xū
nine meals in thirty days -- to live in dire poverty - sān xún jiǔ shí
glorify one 's forefathers and enrich one 's posterity - guāng qián qǐ hòu