No, no, No
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m é IDI ā nm é ID ǎ o, which means confused or confused. It comes from the story of the grey appendix.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan · Li Xingdao's the second fold of "the story of the gray appendix": "you are not old, how can you be so indecisive, regardless of whether the lawsuit is true or false, and distinguish the clear and turbid."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; of a disordered appearance. The old, the small and the beautiful are better than the Lantern Festival. The fourth discount of the first book of the romance of the Western chamber by Wang Shifu in Yuan Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : méi diān méi dǎo
No, no, No
rise to one 's full height and smite the table. pāi àn ér qǐ
wet by the rain and burnt by the sun. yǔ lín rì shài
look forward with eager expectancy. yǎn chuān cháng duàn