disconcerted
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī NJ ī ngy á oy è, refers to restlessness, just like the flags floating in the wind. It comes from the biography of Su Qin in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
The biographies of Su and Qin in historical records: "the heart is as swaying as the county's banner, but the end of nothing is thin."
Idiom usage
Examples
The eyebrow is green with frown, the dimple is red with smile, and a small mouth is just like a newly broken durian, which can be seen unconsciously. The fifth chapter of Zeng Pu's the flowers of the evil sea in Qing Dynasty
disconcerted
A rotten chicken has a hard mouth - jī làn zuǐ bā yìng
premature death of a virtuous or gifted individual - lán cuī yù zhé
things of the present are right and those of the past are wrong - jīn shì zuó fēi
join closely together like the teeth of a comb or the scales of a fish - zhì bǐ lín zhēn