Between the eyes
Yu Mu Jian Zhu is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is y ú m ù Ji ā nzh ū, which means to compare the false with the true. It's from the contract of participation.
The origin of Idioms
"Shentongqi" said: "fish eyes are not pearls, but Penghao is not a oyster." In Sima Guang's Ji Xia Fu of Song Dynasty, it is said that "the jade is disordered, the pearls are between the eyes of the fish, the spring is mixed when the silt rises, and the valley is Wuhu when the grass grows."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, adverbial
Between the eyes
hackneyed and stereotyped expressions - chén cí làn diào