out of one 's wits
Shizhang Shizhi is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ī zh ā ngsh ī zh ì, which describes the act of flustered, restless.
Entry
out of one 's wits
Pinyin
shīzhāngshīzhì
Citation explanation
"The old lady went out to meet the officials who came to call because she was upset and frustrated when she heard the call In the ancient and modern novels, Shi Hongzhao's meeting of dragon and tiger monarchs and ministers: "when you look at it again, it's Shi Dahan who squats beside the East Division. When he meets Yan Xingshou, he loses his mind and goes on singing." In Feng Menglong's warning to the world · plan to bet on the disaster of the golden eel in Ming Dynasty, when my mother saw that the girl's foreword should not be followed, she lost her mind, and her face turned green and red. Ling Mengchu of Ming Dynasty (Volume 3): when Ru Ren saw that he was a little flustered and frustrated, he was puzzled.
usage
It is used as predicate, attributive and adverbial to describe a flustered action
out of one 's wits
come together through thick and thin - huàn nàn yǔ gòng
The letter covers the whole world - hán gài qián kūn
one 's word does not express his idea - cí bù dá yì
Water and fire are incompatible - shuǐ huǒ bù xiāng róng
splits off as it meets the edge of knife without effort - yìng rèn ér jiě