be disconcerted
Panic, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ā nghu á NGW ú Cu ò, meaning in a hurry, at a loss, the same as "panic". It's from Yongchuang sketch: Land judgment.
The origin of Idioms
Zhu Guozhen of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the essay of Yongchuang: judging the land: "the next day, when chongchuang arrived, the value of the river rose, the boat was lost, and the boat people were in a panic."
Idiom usage
It refers to the scene of panic and confusion. In Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio, Jin Shengse in Qing Dynasty: "the blood is overflowing, but the time is short. If you are in a hurry, you will be at a loss."
Chinese PinYin : cāng huáng wú cuò
be disconcerted
don 't pursue a beaten enemy. qióng kòu wù zhuī
bump against things on every side. kē tóu pèng nǎo
a great ability to rule the country. jīng shì zhī cái
You can't get up or down. shàng bù zháo tiān,xià bù zháo dì
treatment chosen according to the variability of an individual. yīn rén zhì yí
the meeting of wind and clouds. fēng yún jì huì