panic-stricken
Panic, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī nghu á NGW ú cuॸ, refers to because of panic, suddenly do not know what to do. It comes from the biography of Yuanhui in the book of the Northern Qi 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 Chapter 118 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: a close minister wrote: "the people outside the city, supporting the old and carrying the young, crying loudly and escaping their lives." The queen was in a panic. Chapter 14 of the chronicles of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty. So he built a dormitory and told Xianggong. Xianggong was at a loss.
Analysis of Idioms
Panic: panic
Idiom usage
It refers to panic.
panic-stricken
able men tied down to a routine post - lǎo jì fú lì
beat the swords into ploughshares - zhù jiàn wéi lí