have a lingering fear
The Chinese idiom, pronounced x ī NY ǒ uy ú J ì, refers to a dangerous thing that is past but still afraid in retrospect. From Liuzhou's "wind and rain Peach Blossom Island".
Analysis of Idioms
A bird in shock, a tiger in conversation
[antonym] calm and calm
The origin of Idioms
Liu Zhou's "storm Peach Blossom Island": "talking about the scene of collapsing the polder three years ago, boss Zhao said with a lingering fear:" half of the people in Taohua Island were drowned and all the crops were destroyed that time. '”
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate, attribute, adverbial; derogatory; fear.
Examples
Sun Li's "march forward and fight bravely - Speech at a forum" said: "if the first time he met a well rope on the road, he would not have a lingering fear."
have a lingering fear
take a share of the spoils without participating in the robbery - zuò dì fēn zāng
under the moon and before the flowers - yuè xià huā qián
apply ointment to one 's lips and wipe one 's tongue with a towel - gāo chún shì shé
various difficulties and hardships - fēng shuāng yǔ xuě
a book that is shut is but a block - kāi juàn yǒu yì