act with confusion
Flurry is a Chinese idiom, pronounced sh à um á ngji à olu à n, which refers to flustered and describes being flustered and not knowing what to do. From the five Lantern Festival.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] at a loss and at a loss [antonym] leisurely and orderly
The origin of Idioms
In Song Dynasty, Shi Puji's wudenghuiyuan: "ask:" how is the state of great sorrow? " The teacher said, "a thousand eyes come and get one." And he said, "how can you be a person in the environment?" The teacher said, "in a hurry."
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. 1. Song Chenliang's "You Ren Yin Xia Da Zhu Yuanhui's book": "there is no reason why there is no rain in the state of affairs. The secretary must have been in Wuzhou as early as possible. He didn't know what he was appointed, but he was in a hurry." 2. Yuan · anonymous's "hundred flowers Pavilion" the third fold: I'm in a hurry to clean up. 3. Xingshi Hengyan · Cai Ruihong's revenge for humiliation: "the people on board are in a hurry. They have to go, but if they don't, they are in a shallow place." Fourth, Kong Jue and Yuan Jing's the eighth chapter of the biography of new heroes: "the old lady pushed Xiaomei on the Kang in a hurry and pulled a broken quilt to cover her."
act with confusion
act in undue confidence of one 's own ability and look down upon others - fù cái ào wù
worse off than some, better off than many - bǐ shàng bù zú,bǐ xià yǒu yú
one 's crime deserves more than death - sǐ yǒu yú gū