To be confused
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Su í m í w à NGF à n, which means to persist in being confused, to persist in making mistakes and not to be aware of them. It comes from the biography of Gu Xian in the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Gu Xian in the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty: "the fact that there are so many false things about stealing and searching for the people is due to the prosperity of the military in the Song Dynasty, the heavy burden of service, the inability to play frequently, the reliance on skillful praying for the best, the habit of living, and the forgetfulness of rebellion."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
To be confused
Out of sludge but not contaminated - chū wū ní ér bù rǎn
If we divide for a long time, we will get together - fēn jiǔ bì hé,hé jiǔ bì fēn
a combination of insignificant efforts can work miracles - qún qīng zhé zhóu