Dazed and vast
Hunhunhaohao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h à NH à NH à oh à o, meaning boundless and vast. It comes from Tang Luo Yin's calumny book: the metaphor of Cha Ke.
The origin of Idioms
Luo Yin's slander book chakeyu in Tang Dynasty: "the stream of the river, the height of the sky, wanwanzhuan, dizzy and vast, strange and spiritual, sometimes bumps and falls, but the son floats in the middle, can he not be frightened by his hands and feet, and the spirit falls?"
Idiom usage
Used as an attributive or adverbial; spoken
Dazed and vast
mix the spurious with the genuine - yǐ wěi luàn zhēn
one 's voice is like a great bell - shēng rú hóng zhōng
be helpless and in the greatest straits - jì qióng lǜ jìn