all thoughts are blasted
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w à NNI à NJ à Hu à, meaning that all ideas and plans are shattered. Describe the extreme disappointment. From China now.
The origin of Idioms
Li Baojia of the Qing Dynasty wrote three times in China now: "the most snobbish human feelings in the officialdom. If you don't pay attention to Futai, who will pay attention to me? When you think of it, you will be disappointed.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: frustrated, disappointed Antonyms: ambitious, high spirited
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type, as object and attribute, has a derogatory meaning. In Qing Dynasty, Ren Anshang's the book of worship with Wu: "since the pain of Xihe River, I've lost everything." Ba Jin's new life, March 23: "I know I won't live much longer. I feel a little scared of death." Sha Ting's gold rush 21: "the race is obviously faltering, so the widow waves her hand to stop him in despair." It's no use saying anything. I threw the book aside in despair. ——Wang Jiapeng's I'm not a coward
all thoughts are blasted
be very hard up , and in fact ) be at a loose end - shí guāi yùn jiǎn
when one chu man loses his bow , another chu man finds it - chǔ gōng chǔ dé
hit the nail right on the head - shēn zhōng kěn qìng
draw from one to make good the deficits of another - yì bǐ zhù zī
one who tries not to offend anybody - hǎo hǎo xiān shēng