be terror-stricken
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǎ NP ò x ī NH á n, which means to describe the appearance of being bowed by fear. It's from the martial arts of the young school.
The origin of Idioms
Cheng dengji, Ming Dynasty, wrote in his book "martial arts in the qionglin school for a young age:" it's more daunting than the enemy. "
Idiom usage
To be afraid is to be afraid. example as the saying goes, if you don't do something bad, you won't be afraid of ghosts. But people who do something bad are not like this, such as thieves and murderers. When they hear the siren, they are scared and think they are coming to catch them.
Idiom story
In the Northern Song Dynasty, both Fan Zhongyan and Han Qi guarded the border of Shaanxi Province to resist the harassment of Xixia. Their troops were well disciplined and fought bravely and tenaciously. At that time, there was a folk saying in the frontier fortress: "there is a Han in the army, and the West thief's heart and bone are cold when he hears it; there is a fan in the army, and the West thief's heart and bone are cold when he hears it."
Chinese PinYin : dǎn pò xīn hán
be terror-stricken
If a scholar does not go out, he knows everything. xiù cái bù chū mén,quán zhī tiān xià shì
pass through the clouds and break the rocks. chuān yún liè shí