get desperation
The Chinese idiom, Q à J í B à Ihu à I, is used to describe a person who speaks, answers or shouts in a panic because of anger or excitement. It comes from the outlaws of the marsh.
Analysis of Idioms
Be calm and calm
The origin of Idioms
The 67th chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in the Ming Dynasty: "the leader of the water army took the boat to help the army and horses, and they were in transition one after another, only to see a man who was in a hurry and was in a bad mood.
Idiom usage
At that time, the appearance of ~. Wu Jianren's making up anecdotes in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : qì jí bài huài
get desperation
The stolen goods are in a mess. zāng huò láng jí
return to one 's former career. chóng lǐ jiù yè
Scattered injuries and evils. sàn shāng chǒu hài
climb hills and ford streams. pá shān shè shuǐ