be convulsed with fear
Panic, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NGK ǒ NGW à nzhu à ng, which means to describe the extreme fear. From Xie Yang Jieyuan Qi.
Idiom explanation
Panic: fear; Wanzhuang: all kinds of appearance, indicating the degree of deep.
The origin of Idioms
In Xie Yang Jie Yuan Qi, written by Chen Liang of Song Dynasty, it is said that "one hundred sufferings are in the ascendant, and one is in great panic."
Idiom usage
To be afraid is to be afraid. When everyone looked at it, it turned out that it was a group of wild pheasants, like a big enemy, flying south in terror. Qu Bo's the sea of woods and the snowy plain and Wang Shuo's the pleasure of death: "I was often awakened by her twitching and groaning, shaking her desperately, and then she woke up from the nightmare." the enemy was terrified and the enemy fleet was in chaos. (Zheng Chenggong in the sixth grade of Jiangsu Education Press)
Chinese PinYin : jīng kǒng wàn zhuàng
be convulsed with fear
resign oneself to one's fate. tīng tiān yóu mìng
have talent but no opportunity to use it. lóng pán fèng yì
one has reached the highest rank open to a subject. guì jí rén chén
The river is clear and the sea is exhausted. hé qīng hǎi jié