Hawk billed Harrier
Hawk billed harrier eyes is a Chinese idiom, pronounced y ī ngzu ǐ y à om ù, which means to describe the appearance of treacherous and ferocious.
explain
It describes the appearance as treacherous and ferocious.
source
"The old man had five sons, each with a hawk's beak and a kite's eyes like a wolf's tiger," Yu shaosu wrote in the moon falling on the roof
Discrimination of words
Synonym: hawk nose and harrier eye idiom structure: combined type generation time: Modern degree of common use: rare emotional color: commendatory words
usage
He has a face with a hawk's beak and a kite's eye
Hawk billed Harrier
be a restless fellow like a drifting water plant - píng zōng làng jì
scratch one 's head and stroke one 's ear - sāo tóu mō ěr
It's not that friends don't get together - bù shì yuān jiā bù jù tóu