Scared to death
Panic, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ú NJ ī ngpॸluॸ, which means extreme panic. It comes from Chen Ruyuan's the story of the golden lotus, a case of poetry in Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Ruyuan of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the poem case of the story of the Golden Lotus: "as soon as this book is published, this guy is not only from the Qing Dynasty, but also from the earth, which makes people scared and tongue tied."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attributive, or adverbial; used in panic
Chinese PinYin : hún jīng pò luò
Scared to death
the southern mountain might be moved off. nán shān kě yí
shed streams of tears and snivel. tì lèi jiāo liú
fold one 's hands upon one 's forehead. yǐ shǒu jiā é
be confused like a tangle of flax. máng wú duān xù
remain an indifferent spectator. cóng bì shàng guān