worried and distressed
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í t ø NGG ō NGX ī n, which means feeling extremely anxious and sad. From the soul of jade pear.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 24 of Xu Zhenya's the soul of jade pear: "tears are as long as lines, and the lamp is dark without flowers. Mengxia was shocked by this accident, and she was very upset. After a long time, I was a little sober, and I sat in danger like a fool, looking depressed. "
Idiom usage
Examples
The third and fifth chapter of Liang Yusheng's three swordsmen in the lake: "Feng Ying is in agony at this time. He has no time to ask who the mausoleum is, and then stabs SA tianla with his sword."
Chinese PinYin : jí tòng gōng xīn
worried and distressed
console oneself with false hopes. wàng méi zhǐ kě
A small weight weighs a thousand pounds. chèng tuó suī xiǎo yā qiān jīn
spread out and scatter about like stars in the sky or chessman on the chessboard. qí bù xīng chén
close the country to international intercourse. bì guān zì zhǔ
Turn over the yellow and pour out the soap. fān huáng dǎo yí