Bewildered but not contrary
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m í é RB ù f ǎ n, which means that you don't know how to come back after you get lost. It means that you don't know how to correct mistakes. It comes from the chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, Wei Zhi and Zhong Hui Zhuan.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Shou of the Jin Dynasty wrote in the chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, Wei Zhi and Zhong Hui Zhuan that "if you are safe and secure, you will be confused but not rebellious
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: lost but not returned
Antonym: know the way back
Idiom usage
It means not to correct a mistake.
Examples
The subject and the object are inverted, confused but not confused. Lu Jiuyuan's book with Zeng Zhai in Song Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : mí ér bù fǎn
Bewildered but not contrary
be courteous to the wise and condescending to scholars. lǐ xián xià shì
with one 's hair standing on end. máo gǔ sǒng rán
expose a cut-off head to public view as a warning to. xiāo shǒu shì zhòng