be frightened out of one 's wits
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch í h ú NDU ó pॸ, which means to shock the soul. From Xu Chi's the light of geology.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonyms]: chihundang soul, soul stirring [Tongyun CI] Xianghe Yimo, acting for others, Zhang Benji Mo, precious products and pornographic goods, pointing to the mountains and talking about the mill, seeking to do a few words, prosperity and decline, attacking other mountains and making mistakes, the disaster of military revolution, a hundred useless works
The origin of Idioms
Xu Chi's the light of Geology: "all kinds of impressions, fresh and solemn, make him dazzled and dazzled."
Idiom usage
Combined; as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning. example Li Ying's poem in praise of the drill tower: "when I look at the breathtaking drill towers, I think of all this, and I hear endless drums and sirens."
Chinese PinYin : chí hún duó pò
be frightened out of one 's wits
Passing on the tortoise and attacking the purple. chuán guī xí zǐ
Good fortune is hard to give up. shàn cái nán shě