tremble with terror
Trembling with fear, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī NJ ī NGD ǎ nzh à n, which means to describe being very afraid; the same as "trembling with fear". It comes from the Pinghua of the Qin Dynasty and the six kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
In the volume of the Pinghua of the Qin Dynasty merging the six kingdoms, Wang Jian saw that Li Mu did not come out of the city and attacked the city with his troops. The cry in front of the city made the king of Zhao tremble, and the generals of the civil and military forces were in a hurry. "
Idiom usage
To describe timidity.
Examples
For a moment, there was a frightening roar from the forest. The third chapter of Du Pengcheng's defending Yan'an
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: trembling, trembling, shivering
tremble with terror
no end of trouble for the future - hòu huàn wú qióng