be frightened out of one 's wits
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch í h ú NDU ó pॸ, which means to shock the soul. From Xu Chi's the light of geology.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonyms]: chihundang soul, soul stirring [Tongyun CI] Xianghe Yimo, acting for others, Zhang Benji Mo, precious products and pornographic goods, pointing to the mountains and talking about the mill, seeking to do a few words, prosperity and decline, attacking other mountains and making mistakes, the disaster of military revolution, a hundred useless works
The origin of Idioms
Xu Chi's the light of Geology: "all kinds of impressions, fresh and solemn, make him dazzled and dazzled."
Idiom usage
Combined; as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning. example Li Ying's poem in praise of the drill tower: "when I look at the breathtaking drill towers, I think of all this, and I hear endless drums and sirens."
be frightened out of one 's wits
go forward with great strength and vigour - hào hào dàng dàng
with both extensive knowledge and profound scholarship - dà hán xì rù
arbitrariness and imperiousness - wǔ duàn zhuān héng