be dizzy
Dizziness, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ó uy ū nm ù Xu à n, which means dizziness, feeling everything spinning; sometimes it also describes being overwhelmed by complicated things. It comes from a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin.
The origin of Idioms
The sixth chapter of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty: "everything in the room is dazzling, making people dizzy."
Idiom usage
He felt dizzy when he was so angry that he became unconscious. Seeing your question makes me dizzy. I don't know how to answer it. the prosperity of the urban world makes me feel dizzy and dizzy. I don't feel the tranquility of the countryside. seeing this bizarre political situation, Shanghai people have to be dizzy and frightened. ——Ouyang mountain "struggle" (people's education press Chinese seventh grade volume 1 Lesson 17 "step, step again") I look down from the edge of the cliff, feel dizzy; I absolutely can't climb down, I will slip and die. seeing this bizarre political situation, Shanghai people have to be dizzy and frightened. Ouyang Shan's struggle
be dizzy
what the heart wishes one 's hands accomplish - dé xīn yìng shǒu
There is no righteous war in the spring and Autumn period - chūn qiū wú yì zhàn
things that reopen sb . 's wound - chù wù shāng qíng