释义 |
Examples:motivated by a desire see the world in chaos—lit. see the wind and set the helm (idiom); fig. act pragmatically—the eye can see nothing worthwhile all around (idiom); arrogant—stand tall and see far (idiom); taking the long and broad view—see the light again (idiom); delivered from oppression—lit. the eye cannot bear see it (idiom); a scene too pitiful to behold—the appearance of unity, but divided at heart (idiom); seeming harmony belies underlying disagreement—gymnosperm (plants with seed contained in a cone)—The sea of bitterness has no bounds, turn your head see the shore (idiom). Only Buddhist enlightenment can allow one to shed off the abyss of worldly suffering.—look up and see no-one familiar (idiom); not having anyone to rely on—qualities that make sth worth seeing (or reading)—see the opportunity and act (idiom); act according to circumstances—The benevolent sees benevolence, the wise sees wisdom.—fig. seeing others do what one loves do, one is inspired to try it again—lit. seeing clearly the downy feather of autumn (idiom, from Mencius); fig. sensitive the finest detail—The person on the spot is baffled, the onlooker sees clear (idiom). The onlooker sees more of the game.—change at once on seeing sth different (idiom); loving fads and novelty—seeing once is better than hearing a hundred times (idiom); seeing for oneself is better than hearing from many others—dissemination as fruit (evolutionary strategy for seed dispersal)—seeing bed in the evening and visiting in the morning (ancient filial duty)—believe what one sees, not what one hears (idiom). Don't believe what people tell you until you see if for yourself.—seeing sth for oneself is better than hearing about it from others—knife, saw, ax and hatchet (idiom); facing torture and execution—déjà vu (the experience of seeing exactly the same situation a second time)—lit. not shed a tear until one sees the coffin [idiom.]—lit. see only the other rider's dust and have no hope of catching up [idiom.]— |