be out of one 's wits with fright
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à ns à NGH ú nxi à o, which means extreme fear and panic. It's from Jingzhong Ji, class teacher.
The origin of Idioms
In Ming Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "jingzhongji · headmaster", it is said that "Xiongwei killed the chieftain of Jin Dynasty, and he was scared. He abandoned his armor and absconded. From then on, the frontier was no longer carefree."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: terrified, frightened, and [antonym]: calm and calm
Idiom usage
I'm very afraid.
be out of one 's wits with fright
Following the good and rectifying the evil - shùn měi kuāng è
incomplete parts of ancient scripts - duàn jiǎn cán biān
Throw oneself into the river and rush into the well - tóu hé bēn jǐng