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)
Chinese PinYin : hún hún è è
muddle along without any aim
unable to suffer the humiliation made by the warder even if he is a whittled phoney one. xuē mù wéi lì
make a living away from home. chuǎng dàng jiāng hú
harmony between husband and wife. sè tiáo qín nòng
come over and pledge allegiance. shù shēn zì hào
take up the cudgels for the injured party. dǎ bào bù píng