panic-stricken
It's a Chinese idiom. Its pronunciation is sh é ns è C ā nghu á ng. It means that in case of emergency, you are nervous and panic, and lose your normal state. It comes from the 24th chapter of Chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Yu Shaoyu of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In Chapter 24 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Yu Shaoyu of the Ming Dynasty, it is said that if a minister looks at him in a hurry, he must have this matter in his mind
Idiom usage
One day, I was sitting alone, when I saw some people who were in a hurry and in a hurry come in and yell, "disaster! disaster! There is a war between Japan and Russia, and the three eastern provinces are going to lose their protection! The first chapter of Zeng Pu's Nie Hai Hua in Qing Dynasty
panic-stricken
The clouds are disturbing and breaking - yún rǎo fú liè
individual thinking is as varied as individual looks - rén xīn rú miàn
i find myself not up to the honor accorded me - dāng zhī yǒu kuì
restrain one 's grief and accord with inevitable changes - jié āi shùn biàn