be disconcerted
In Chinese, Pinyin is C ā nghu á ngsh ī cuॸ, which means to be in a hurry and at a loss. It comes from yijianzhi iron tower God.
Idiom explanation
Rush: rush and panic.
The origin of Idioms
Song Hongmai's yijianzhi iron tower God: "the monk is in a panic and has no time to go. The soldiers have been plundered."
Idiom usage
A scene of panic and confusion. The blood is overflowing, but it's gone. If you're in a hurry, you'll be at a loss. Pu Songling's Liao Zhai Zhi Yi Jin Sheng Se in Qing Dynasty and Luo Guanzhong's Romance of the Three Kingdoms in Ming Dynasty (Chapter 42): Cao Cao is in a panic. Zhang Liao said, "the prime minister is not surprised." In Ling Mengchu's the second moment of surprise, he said, "I was in a panic; I couldn't avoid it." In the Qing Dynasty, Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio, Jin Shengse, was full of blood, and the time was short, so she was in a panic. In the second chapter of the romance of the Qing Dynasty, Cai Dongfan said: "when he suddenly reported that Nurhachi had arrived, he felt at a loss and reluctantly gathered the troops and went out of the city to fight the enemy." Chapter 38 of the history of civilization: "at this time, Ji Futai had gone to Xingtai to see Lu Zhitai off, so Qian xianzun rushed to Xingtai and reported the priest's words in a panic."
Chinese PinYin : cāng huáng shī cuò
be disconcerted
a founding father of a country. kāi guó yuán xūn
The apes cry and the cranes complain. yuán tí hè yuàn
glorify virtue and censure vice. bāo shàn biǎn è