cover up the eyes and ears of others
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ē R é n ě RM ù, which means to cover other people's hearing and hearing. Playing tricks to cover up the truth. It's from the story of Xuanhe in Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Wu Mingshi of the Song Dynasty: the first episode of the great song Xuanhe's legacy: "it's obvious that people in the lower reaches live in prostitutes' houses. Although they want to cover people's eyes and ears, they can't get it."
Analysis of Idioms
To deceive, confuse, deceive
Idiom usage
Verb object; predicate, attributive; derogatory
cover up the eyes and ears of others
There is no ivory in a dog's mouth - gǒu kǒu lǐ shēng bù chū xiàng yá