look at sth fiercely
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is y ī NGL í NH ǔ sh ì, which means watching like an eagle and a tiger fiercely and greedily; it describes being ill at heart and waiting for an opportunity to grab. From on private morality.
The origin of Idioms
Liang Qichao's "on private morality" 2: "the Russian government, with the power of a hawk and a tiger, frightens the five continents, while its people call it the house of evil, and the darkness never returns to the sky. (the Japanese have" Lucia's theory of subjugation ", which is all in one's poverty.) It's also an impact on people's livelihood. "
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, object, attribute; used in writing. Example: Zhang Jixu's Narration: "the eagle and the tiger look at several powerful countries, look around the emperor, and have nothing to use."
look at sth fiercely
A pot of wine and a bag of rice - jiǔ wèng fàn náng
be absolutely matchless in the world - dāng shì wú shuāng
Use the public against private interests - yǐ gōng miè sī