muddle along without any aim
In Chinese, Pinyin is h ú NH ú n è è, which means that the original meaning is sincere and solemn. The appearance is confused and ignorant. It comes from Han Yang Xiong's "Fa Yan · Wen Shen".
Idiom explanation
Muddle: deep look; muddle: serious look. The original intention is sincere and solemn. The appearance is confused and ignorant.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yangxiong's FA Yan Wen Shen: "Yu Xia's book hun hun Er," Shang Shu "Hao Hao Er," Zhou Shu "og er."
Analysis of Idioms
Confused, confused, dizzy, drunk
Idiom usage
The two Beijing ballads have no trace. (Volume 3 of shisou neibian by Hu Yinglin in Ming Dynasty)
muddle along without any aim
turn sb . 's trick to one 's own use - jiāng jì jiù jì
customs and influences handed down from past generations - yí fēng yú liè
blazing fire and dry wood -- from bad to worse - liè huǒ gān chái
a myriad of stars surround the moon - zhòng xīng pěng yuè
do not go beyond the prescribed limit - bù yuè léi shi