be thrown into a panic
Panic, a Chinese idiom, pronounced J ī nghu á ngsh ī cuॸ, means that because of panic, I don't know what to do. It comes from the biography of yuanhuiye in the book of Northern Qi by Li Baiyao of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of yuan Huiye in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty, the filial friend of Yuan Dynasty was in a panic at the time of his execution, and Huiye was in a good mood
Analysis of Idioms
Be at a loss, be at a loss, be at a loss
Idiom usage
Shaoqing's modesty, yuan was a little afraid to see him, but he didn't feel it. Ling Mengchu, Ming Dynasty (Volume 11)
Idioms and allusions
During the northern and Southern Dynasties, Emperor Jingmu's xuansun Yuanhui was upright and upright. After the Northern Wei Dynasty was destroyed by the Northern Qi Dynasty, Emperor Wu, the God of Qi, married the empress of emperor Xiaowu to yuanshao, the nephew of emperor Xiaozhuang. Yuanhuiye scolds yuanshao in the presence of emperor Wenxuan of Qi, and is ordered to be executed by Emperor Wenxuan of Qi. At the same time, there is yuan Xiaoyou, who is terrified. Yuanhuiye, with a self-confident look, died calmly
be thrown into a panic
not forget after having run the eye over - guò mù chéng sòng
remedy defects and rectify errors - bǔ piān jiù bì
adjust to changing circumstances - suí jī yìng biàn
an army burning with righteous indignation is bound to win - āi bīng bì shèng