be so pleased that one does not know what to do
In Chinese, Pinyin is w ú K ě B ù K ě, which means that everything can be done. It also means that you don't know what to do. It means that you are extremely emotional. It comes from the Analects of Confucius.
The origin of Idioms
"The Analects of Confucius · Weizi": "I am different, so I am indispensable."
Idiom usage
Chapter 37 of Cao Xueqin's a dream of Red Mansions in Qing Dynasty: "when the old lady saw her, she was overjoyed. When she saw someone, she said," it's Baoyu who is filial to me. Even a flower wants to come. "
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] is dispensable, opinionated and ambiguous, and [antonym] is clear-cut
be so pleased that one does not know what to do
draw from one to make good the deficits of another - yì bǐ zhù cǐ
people are numerous and products are plentiful - wù fù mín fēng
the evening of the moon and the morning of the flowers - yuè xī huā zhāo
be contented in poverty and devoted to things spiritual - ān pín shǒu dào