be struck all of a heap
Panic, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu ā ngzu ò y ī Tu á n, which means to describe extreme panic. It's the same as "panic". It comes from the marriage story of awakening the world.
The origin of Idioms
In the 16th chapter of the romance of awakening the world written by Xi Zhou Sheng in the Qing Dynasty: "Madame Chao knew that her son had really done this, and saw that he was going to get sick again. I'm afraid that the retribution was so quick that she was in a hurry. She wanted to tell old Chao about it and compensate for the two men's clothes."
Idiom usage
Chapter 56 of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in the late Yuan and early Ming Dynasty: "Xu Ning's wife and two Yahuan are like hot ants, desperate and in a panic.
Chinese PinYin : huāng zuò yī tuán
be struck all of a heap
behave in a noisy , gay and boisterous manner. xī pí xiào liǎn
said of an elegant demeanor and high personality. yù gǔ bīng jī
make an exhibition of oneself. chū guāi nòng chǒu
Carve the spleen and the kidney. juān pí zhuó shèn
follow suit without knowing why. ǎi rén kàn chǎng