stare at with wide eyes
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ē NGM ù é RSH ì, which is interpreted as staring with wide eyes. It comes from the Jinling residence of Yi Jian Ding Zhi.
The origin of Idioms
In Song Hongmai's Jinling residence, Yijian Dingzhi: "the door of the west room is open again, and a woman's dress is green, and she looks at her baby with astonishment."
Idiom usage
To describe with surprise or fear
Examples
In Chapter 14 of Li Luyuan's Qiludeng in Qing Dynasty, "Wang Chunyu didn't understand what the audience said, but he didn't dare to say anything."
Analysis of Idioms
Be in a state of fright
The antonym is pleasant and kind
stare at with wide eyes
there remained but a single one - shuò guǒ jǐn cún
with hair unshevelled and teeth incomplete - péng tóu lì chǐ
husband elevated by his wife's high status or fortune - qī róng fū guì
Snake into a dragon, the same text - shé huà wéi lóng,bù biàn qí wén