amiss
If something is lost, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ú y ǒ usu ǒ sh ī, meaning as if something is lost, describes the appearance of restlessness. It's from a new account of the world: moral conduct.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, wrote a new saying of the world: moral conduct: "then the heart of stinginess has come back to life." Liu Xiao of the Song Dynasty in the Southern Dynasty Annotated: "if you are disappointed, you will lose something."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attributive, adverbial; used of a person's manner. example at dusk, family members are forced to return home. If they lose something, they are not happy. Song Hongmai's Yi Jian Zhi Jia Zhi Yong Kang advocate Nu and Qing Cao Xueqin's dream of Red Mansions Chapter 30: Lin Daiyu regretted her quarrel with Baoyu, but he didn't have the reason to go, so she was bored day and night, as if she had lost something. Chapter 102 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: I feel desolate all over the eyes, the terrace is still there, and the women's wall is planted as a garden. I feel like I have lost something. Chapter 5 of the story of heroes and Heroines: the young master is still standing there watching, feeling disappointed and lost.
Chinese PinYin : rú yǒu suǒ shī
amiss
feel very depressed at the prospect. chù jǐng shāng xīn
have a fine colour in one 's cheeks. mǎn miàn hóng guāng
rein in on before it is too late. xuán yá lè mǎ