be rendered speechless
Silence, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ā NK ǒ UW ú y á n, which means to keep your mouth shut. From the biography of lanterns in Jingde.
Idiom explanation
Shut up: shut up.
The origin of Idioms
Shi Daoyuan's Jingde Zhuandeng Lu (Volume 12) in Song Dynasty said: "if you can't, the old monk will be silent."
Idiom usage
As a predicate, attribute, adverbial; used in dealing with affairs. "When people saw that Guan Sheng was going to play Qianjin, they didn't dare to make a noise." Chapter 54 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms written by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: "a single remark makes Lu Zijing." In the first five chapters of CAI Dongfan's popular romance of the Qing Dynasty, Cheng Dong was furious and pushed Huang Fei and Wu Zhikui to the bottom of the city to make him surrender. Huang Fei, Wu Zhikui said a few words. "
be rendered speechless
one 's character is correctly criticized only after his death - gài guān shì dìng
go to and fro in constant streams - luò yì bù jué
Learn from the past and learn from the present - zhī wǎng jiàn jīn
decision making through operations research - yùn chóu shè cè
wear the shoes on the head and the cap on the feet - guān lǚ dào zhì
continue walking in the old steps and seclude oneself - gù bù zì fēng