Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - How to say "a hundred hearings is better than a sighting"

How to say "a hundred hearings is better than a sighting"

1. I have long heard that Alishan has beautiful scenery. This time I went to visit it, and it was indeed worth seeing it.

2. I have heard about the beauty of the Grand Canyon for a long time. Seeing it is better than seeing it. This trip to the West has opened my eyes.

3. Seeing is better than hearing. I used to hear how beautiful the underwater scenery of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is. This time I came to snorkel, and it really lived up to its reputation!

4. Shaolin Kung Fu is so exquisite that seeing it once is better than hearing it a hundred times!

5. After reading Li Bai's poems, I went to the Three Gorges of the Yangtze River and felt that the boat had passed the Ten Thousand Mountains. It was really better to see it once than to hear it a hundred times.

6. In the past, the lions painted by painters were all hairy. However, this lion does not look like that now, so seeing it is better than hearing it a hundred times.

7. This old scholar is famous, and it is better to hear about it than to see it. Today, I listened to his lecture and it was indeed well-deserved.

8. There is a saying that seeing something is worth hearing a hundred times.

9. Today’s experience is very special to me. It’s better to see it than to hear it a hundred times.

10. It is said that seeing is worth hearing a hundred times. Sometimes a written description cannot match the rich content contained in a historical photo.

Extended information:

Seeing is better than hearing a hundred times

Meaning hearing: hearing. No matter how much you hear, it is better to see it with your own eyes.

Source: "Hanshu·Zhao Chongguo Biography": "Hearing a hundred times is not as good as seeing it once. It is difficult to conquer the army. I am willing to rush to Jincheng."

No matter how many times you hear the translation, it is not as good as seeing it once. I've seen it once with my own eyes, and it's hard to imagine a military force. I'm willing to rush to Jincheng.

Grammar: subject-predicate form; used as predicate; describing understanding things as not as certain as personal observation