be puzzled
It is a Chinese idiom.
The Pinyin is: Li ù sh é NW ú zh ǔ
Definition: describes panic, worry, no idea, do not know how to do. It comes from the ode to the skull.
Entry
be puzzled
Pinyin
liùshénwúzhǔ
Citation explanation
Zhang Heng's "Ode to the skull" says: "all the five spirits are restored, and all the six spirits are restored." Feng Menglong's Xingshi Hengyan (Volume 29) of Ming Dynasty: "I was shocked to learn that the county has no master, and I don't have the heart to eat wine." Chapter 58 of a brief history of civilization: when the family saw that the master was ill and his wife had never come back, they were even more distracted. Zhu Ziqing's "the history of laughter · the history of laughter": I'm a man who has no mind and lacks intelligence. " Yao xueyin's Li Zicheng, Volume 3, Chapter 26: "emperor Chongzhen was upset and had no master, so he reluctantly read the documents for a while." Lin zhengrang's the moon is the brightness of Hometown: "Wang Aiying leaned against the door feebly, listening to the light and rapid knocking, and was distracted for a moment."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate, attribute, adverbial; derogatory.
Analysis of Idioms
Panic, restlessness and uneasiness. [antonym] calm, as if nothing had happened, calm.
be puzzled