make blind and disorderly conjectures
Hu siluang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ú s à Lu à NLI à ng, which means still wishful thinking; refers to unfounded and unrealistic imagination. It comes from Longchuan biezhi.
The origin of Idioms
In the volume of song Su Zhe's Longchuan farewell annals, he said, "the emperor's relatives all laugh that the Empress Dowager wants to find a rabbit in the old vortex." Those who heard of it were frightened and stood back several steps. Duqi did not move and said, "don't be so thoughtless, Empress Dowager."
Analysis of Idioms
Wishful thinking
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute; it is used to describe the thought without profit.
Examples
It's better to sweep away everything under your feet, and set up a course for daily use, so as to make a real effort. Don't be so thoughtless and live a happy life. One of Zhu Xi's reply to Uncle pan Wenshu in Song Dynasty
make blind and disorderly conjectures
sap one's spirit by seeking pleasures - wán wù sàng zhì
the wolf has a winning game when the shepherds quarrel - huáng què zài hòu
acclaim as the acme or perfection - tàn guān zhǐ yǐ
steadfastly stand on one's ground - kuī rán bù dòng
one is long and the other is short - yī cháng yī duǎn