distracted
Lost soul, lost soul, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is di ū h ú NDI ū P ò, meaning to describe very panic, the same as "lost soul". It comes from the biography of heroes in Luliang.
The origin of Idioms
Ma Feng's "Lu Liang heroes" Chapter 19: "there is a wolf rushed up, paws on his body, is frightening him to lose his soul, a group of hoers came from the mountain, just to drive the wolf away."
Idiom usage
It is used as adverbial or attributive; it refers to people's confusion. She's scared to death by you.
distracted
outmaneuver the enemy over glasses of wine - zhé chōng zūn zǔ
phoenix singing in the morning sun -- good omen for the country - fèng míng zhāo yáng
concentrate on trifles and neglect essentials - qì běn qiú mò
injure both the state and the people - bìng guó yāng mín