In a hurry
It's a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is Ji à om á ngsh à Ulu à n, which means to describe being in a hurry and not knowing what to do. From the five Lantern Festival.
The origin of Idioms
The eleventh volume of the five Lantern Festival yuan written by Shi Puji of Song Dynasty: "how is the state of great sorrow?" The teacher said, "a thousand eyes come and get one." And he said, "how can you be a person in the environment?" The teacher said, "in a hurry."
Idiom usage
To be in a state of confusion. example tongue out, head shaking, feet in a hurry. The 79th chapter of Guo Xun's biography of heroes in the Ming Dynasty and Zhu Xi's Zhu Zi Yu Lei · Da Xue in the Song Dynasty: "if you don't know this first, you will be in a hurry when it comes to business. How can you think about it and get it?"
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: in a hurry; antonym: leisurely
Chinese PinYin : jiǎo máng shǒu luàn
In a hurry
practise bribery or receive bribes publicly. huò lù gōng xíng
love something too much to part with it. ài bù rěn shì