What does the idiom "only look at appearance" mean?

There is an idiom to describe a person who only looks at his appearance.

Judge people only by their appearance.

An idiom that can't just look at appearance.

Jin Yu copied it from the outside and lost it.

Pronunciation: jρn yùqíwàI, bù i xù qí zh not ng.

Interpretation: today: the metaphor is gorgeous; Failure: rotten cotton. It looks like Jin Xiangyu outside, but it is broken cotton wool inside. Metaphor looks gorgeous, but the heart is a mess.

Source: Liu Mingxi's "Orange Water Talk": "Look at him sitting in the high hall and riding a big horse. Who is drunk and fat, who is not majestic? Why not go beyond Jin Yu? This is also a shame.

What idioms describe "don't just look at the surface, look at the essence"

A blind man touches an elephant, but one leaf blinds his eyes, and he can see the leopard from the inside.

First, the blind touch the elephant.

Vernacular explanation: used to describe incomplete understanding of things, stubborn opinions and wild guesses.

Dynasty: Song Dynasty

Author: Shi Daoyuan

Source: "Jing De Deng Chuan Lu Jin Hong Zen Master": "A monk asked:' Many people touch elephants; Say heresy; What would you do if you suddenly met someone with a unique vision?' "

A monk asked,' people touch elephants blindly; Oppose heresy respectively; Why do you suddenly meet a discerning person?'

Second, leaf obstacle.

Interpretation of vernacular: a leaf covers the eyes, and metaphor depends on both the surface and the essence.

Dynasty: modern

Author: * * *

Source: "On protracted war": "A leaf blocks the eye, but you can't see Mount Tai, but you are self-righteous."

Third, generalize from one part to the whole.

Vernacular explanation: take: use; Partial: one-sided; Summary: summary; All: all. Take a one-sided view of the whole problem.

Dynasty: modern

Author: Wu

Source: "General Logic": "Only by reading analytically can we learn deeply, so that we will not swallow dates and have a little knowledge; Only by reading comprehensively can we learn a complete system without taking it out of context. "

Fourthly, my humble opinion on forecasting.

Vernacular interpretation: Li: gourd ladle; Tube: bamboo tube; Peep: People look through a small hole. Measure the sea with a ladle and see the sky through the small hole in the bamboo tube. Metaphor knowledge is one-sided and narrow, and you can't see the whole.

Dynasty: Eastern Han Dynasty

Author: historian Ban Gu

Source: Biography of Han Dong Fang Shuo: "How can you see the sky through a pipe, measure the sea with a gun, strike a bell with a gun, test its consistency, test its arts and sciences, and make its voice?"

Look at the sky with a tube, measure the sea with a spiral, and ring the bell with a clock. Can you understand the terms and principles and learn from his accent?

Five, peep at the leopard in the tube

Vernacular interpretation: it is also a metaphor that you can't see the whole picture of things, and you can only have one-sided understanding.

Dynasty: Southern and Northern Dynasties

Author: Liu Yiqing

Source: Shi Shuo Xin Yu: "This lang also manages leopards; See you then. "

This young man is also a peeping leopard; I only see a stripe on the leopard.

An idiom that makes decisions only by looking at appearances.

Judge people only by their appearance.

Q Pei LUN

Explain the quality and talent of judging people by their appearances.

The source "The Biography of Zhong Ni Disciples in Neijing": "I take people by their tolerance, and I lose; Judge a person by his appearance and lose his feathers. "

The structure is formal.

This usage is derogatory. Used to judge a book by its cover. Generally used as predicate, attribute and object.

Distinguish shapes; Can't write "marry"; Appearance; Can't write "shame"

Synonyms are what they look like.

Antonyms are hired on the basis of merit.

For example, the selection of people should be based on character and ability; I don't think so.

What is the idiom that only values the appearance of things but not the inner ones?

The idiom "buy bamboo slips and copy pearls"

Pinyin attack m m m m: m m m I d ú huá n zhū

Description: transaction box; Pearl: Pearl. Bought a business box and returned the pearls. Metaphor is a person who has no vision, improper choice, and only pays attention to appearance but not substance. It also satirizes those who don't understand the essence of things, abandon the roots and pursue the end, and abandon the Lord for the second time.

Idiom derogatory term

Idiom describing that people can't look at their appearance.

don't judge a person by the clothes he wears

(Idiom definition)

You can't judge a person just by his appearance.

What idioms can't just look at the meaning of things?

Garbage covered with golden jade coat ―― shiny appearance and rotten inside; Beautiful appearance, evil heart; superficially clever

Pronunciation: jρn yùqíwàI, bù i xù qí zh not ng.

Interpretation: today: the metaphor is gorgeous; Failure: rotten cotton. It looks like Jin Xiangyu outside, but it is broken cotton wool inside. Metaphor looks gorgeous, but the heart is a mess.

Source: Liu Mingxi's "Orange Water Talk": "Look at him sitting in the high hall and riding a big horse. Who is drunk, fat and fresh, and who is not majestic? Why not go beyond Jin Yu? This is also a shame.

What idioms are there that only pay attention to appearance but not inner ones?

It is a good thing to judge a person by his appearance and judge him by his capacity, but it is flashy and superficial.

Don't look at appearances, look at internal idioms.

Lu Yao knows the toughness of a horse, and he has long seen the heart system [explanation] Knowing the power of a horse is far away; It takes a lot and a long time to recognize the good and evil of people's hearts.

Da Qiao Clumsy: Clumsy: Stupid. Refers to a really smart person who doesn't show himself. It looks clumsy on the surface.

Even the wisest man is foolish: refers to a person with a particularly high mind who doesn't show off himself and looks stupid on the surface.

Floating rootless: floating: superficial and unrealistic. Floating on the surface, no foundation. The metaphor is false and untrue, and there is no evidence.

Don't believe in frankness, but guard against benevolence: frankness: integrity; Unkindness: no morality. Don't believe in superficial integrity, but beware of other people's bad intentions.

I know what it is, but I don't know why: it is like this. I know it is, but I don't know why. Describe only superficial phenomena, not the essence or root of things.