mixed
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z á Q ī Z á B ā, which means to describe things are very mixed or things are very messy. It's from flowers in the mirror.
The origin of Idioms
The 73rd chapter of Li Ruzhen's Jing Hua Yuan in Qing Dynasty: "stealing Chen Bian and thinking that he has it, lest others see it, he can't help adding his own meaning. It's so miscellaneous that it's strong that he thinks it's hidden."
Idiom usage
It refers to a very disordered situation.
Examples
Gao Yang's "complete biography of Hu Xueyan · denghuo Lou Tai": "all kinds of people eat in their stomachs, and I don't see what's wrong with them."
mixed
read without thorough understanding - bù qiú shèn jiě
out of the depth of misfortune comes bliss - pǐ jí tài lái
with a severe countenance and a harsh voice - zhèng sè lì shēng