out of one 's wits
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is sh ī zh ā ngsh ī zh ì, which means to be at a loss. It comes from Ming Dynasty Feng Menglong's ancient and modern novels: Chen Yushi's skillful exploration of gold hairpin.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong's ancient and modern novels: Chen Yushi's skillful exploration of Jin Chai Dian: "as the saying goes, 'people are poor and their wisdom is short', how can he be blamed for his ignorance because he is so poor?"
Idiom usage
grammar
It has a derogatory meaning and describes the act of being flustered.
Examples
At that time, I was a man with no master. I'm not as diligent as I used to be. The history of laughter by Zhu Ziqing.
out of one 's wits
reflect credit on one's forefathers - róng zōng yào zǔ
The pearls and the stones meet each other - zhū bì jiāo huī
suffer affronts without resentment - shǔ fù jī cháng
seize on some pretext or other to distort - jiè tí fā huī
act according to god 's will and the desire of the people - yìng tiān cóng rén
be absolutely matchless in the world - dāng shì wú shuāng