in a state of disorder
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù ch é NGT ǐ t ǒ ng, which means that words and deeds have no rules, no appearance, or people or things do not conform to the system, pattern, rules, etc., indicating that people's words and deeds are presumptuous or not solemn. From the romance of the Three Kingdoms.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] informal and [antonym] regular
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 13 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: "the engraving is not enough, and the cone painting is not proper."
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as predicate, complement and clause to indicate that one's words and deeds are unrestrained or not serious. At this time, there was a mess in the official hall. The twenty seventh chapter of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in Qing Dynasty
in a state of disorder
the buddha 's mountain and the mustard seed -- to insert the largest thing into the smallest one -- sheer impossibility - xū mí jiè zǐ