muddleheaded
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ù nd ù Nb ù f ē n, which means everything should be natural. It is often used to indicate ignorance. It comes from Zhuangzi Ying emperor.
Idiom explanation
Chaos: also known as "chaos", the name of central emperor in ancient fables. Everything should be natural. It is often used to indicate ignorance.
The origin of Idioms
"The emperor of the South China Sea is Shu, and the emperor of the North China Sea is good. Shu and Hu conspire to repay the virtue of chaos, saying:" everyone has seven thieves. They eat by seeing and hearing. There is nothing but this. Try to dig it. " If you steal every day, you die in chaos after seven days. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive.
muddleheaded
with fame spreading far and wide - míng wén xiá ěr
a pasture on which cattle can graze - cháng lín fēng cǎo
look after the suffering of the people - guān xīn mín mò
a mantis trying to stop a chariot - táng bì dāng zhé