limited outlook and experience
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǒ uzhen ō ngku ī R ì, which means to see the sun from the window. It refers to reading attentively but not extensively. It's from a new account of the world literature.
Basic definition
Peep at the sun from the window, a Chinese idiom, means to see the sun from the window. It refers to reading attentively but not extensively. It's a window.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Dynasty and Song Dynasty wrote in his book Shishuoxinyu · Literature: "the northern people read books as if they were looking at the moon; the southern people learned as if they were peeping at the sun."
Idiom story
Chu Jiye said to sun Anguo, "northerners are profound, broad and diverse in their studies." Sun Anguo replied, "southerners are pure, clear, accessible, concise and to the point." After hearing this, the eminent monk Zhi Daolin said, "the sages forget to talk to their aunt. For the middle class, reading in the north is like looking at the moon in the light, while learning in the south is like looking at the sun in the window. "
limited outlook and experience
Nine tripods are not enough - jiǔ dǐng bù zú wéi zhòng
Take the essentials and cut them out - jǔ yào shān wú
When a viper stings his hand, a strong man will get rid of it - fù shé shì shǒu,zhuàng shì jiě wàn
many guests of exalted rank were present - gāo péng mǎn zuò