confused
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē NF ē NR ǎ or ǎ o, meaning messy appearance. It can also be used to describe the confusion of thoughts. It comes from preface to Ode to goddess.
Idiom usage
Chapter 54 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty written by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty: "the Jin army rides the river at night, and there is chaos until the dawn." In the palace. Ji Yun's notes on Yuewei thatched cottage and the second chapter of CAI Dongfan's Romance of the Qing Dynasty: "who knows, suddenly there was a big explosion of gunfire, and people were awakened from their sleep. They didn't know where the soldiers were. From the sky down, they couldn't get dressed, but their heads were broken, their hands couldn't hold the blade, and their arms were gone. Most of the soldiers and people in the city registered at the gate of hell; Chueh Chang'an and his son, and a Tai Zhang Jing, are also very close, and their son has gone to hell. "
The origin of Idioms
Song Yu of the Warring States period wrote preface to the ode to the Goddess: "I'm in a trance. If I'm happy, I don't know what I mean."
Chinese PinYin : fēn fēn rǎo rǎo
confused
Those who follow will prosper and those who go against will perish. shùn zhī zhě xīng,nì zhī zhě wáng
play off one power against another. yǐ yí zhì yí