go off into ecstasies
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is sh é NH ú NF ē iyu è, which describes a person who is in a trance. It comes from the application form for doctors in Xie Jia Dynasty by Wang Yucheng of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Yucheng of the Song Dynasty wrote in the application form for doctors in the xiega Dynasty: "tears are everywhere, disorderly in the pipe, the soul flies over, if in the smoke."
Idiom usage
In Qing Dynasty, Li Yu's "casual love · CI Qu · structure" said: "when you want to enter the sky, the author ~, such as in a dream, can't return to the soul until the end of the chapter."
Chinese PinYin : shén hún fēi yuè
go off into ecstasies
swarm as flies do for good or hang round as dogs do for food. yíng yíng gǒu gǒu
remember forever with gratitude. juān gǔ míng xīn
follow with the eye and shake with the hand. mù sòng shǒu huī
rob one 's belly to cover one 's back. wā ròu bǔ chuāng