greatly frightened
Describes extreme panic or loss of normality under the temptation of something
Idiom explanation
[idiom]: out of mind [Pinyin]: H ú Nb ù Zhu ó t ǐ [explanation]: describes extreme panic or loss of normality under the temptation of something. Same as ".".
Idioms and allusions
[source]: on the volume of Pinghua in the former Han Dynasty: "frighten Gao Huang out of his mind." Ming Shi Naian's fifty third chapter of the outlaws of the Marsh: "I saw two yellow scarf strongmen escorting Li Kui. I could only hear the sound of wind and rain in my ears, but I didn't feel that I was walking to the boundary of Jizhou. I was scared out of my mind and shaking my hands and feet."
Discrimination of words
Let's take an example to make a sentence: who mistakenly thinks that she is a miss? When she is out of her mind, she wipes her hand and says, "sister fan, thank you, miss. Thank you so much for your love. I've borrowed a sweat towel." In Shi nodou · mang Shusheng's strong picture of yuanlv [pinyin code]: hbzt is used in subject predicate form; it is used as predicate, adverbial and complement; it describes the loss of normality due to stimulation synonyms are lost in one's soul, lost in one's mind, and out of one's mind antonyms are apathetic, leisurely and self satisfied, and have a natural manner
Chinese PinYin : hún bù zhuó tǐ
greatly frightened
enjoy cockfights and dogracing. dòu jī zǒu gǒu
as long as the heaven and earth endure. dì jiǔ tiān cháng