like mad
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ú Zu ì R ú Ku á ng, which means to describe a person's abnormal expression and inability to control himself. It also means to be overwhelmed by someone or something. It's from the surprise of the first white case.
The origin of Idioms
Volume 2-5 of "the surprise of the first carving of white cases" says: "these people still hope to make Zhang Xuan's case, put him on trial, and make a child of Chang'an intoxicated."
Idiom usage
As a predicate, attribute, adverbial; used in dealing with affairs. Chapter 31 of Zeng Pu's the flowers of the evil sea: "a group of guests are also as drunk as a maniac, some are laughing, some are fighting, some are fighting, some are whispering."
like mad
have an easy control in the matter - zòng héng kāi hé
with a heroic spirit that conquers mountains and rivers - qì zhuàng shān hé
fall in with others ' wishes and acquire admittance - tōu hé gǒu cóng