at a loss
Being at a loss is a Chinese idiom,
Pinyin sh ǒ uz ú sh ī cuॸ,
Definition: describes extreme panic.
idiom
at a loss
Pinyin
shǒuzúshīcuò
Citation explanation
Tang Hanyu's "let the official watch for Mr. Wei" is described as extremely alarmed. He is shocked by his life, calm, shy and at a loss Chapter 85 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms written by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: "after listening to it, Kong Ming was sweating all over his body and at a loss." In the 17th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty, when Jiang Wei, the leader of the Wei Dynasty, was defeated in Niutoushan, Cao Fang, the leader of the Wei Dynasty, called Cao Shuang and said, "if Taifu's words are like this, how can you handle them?" Shuang was at a loss. Looking back at his second brother, he said, "what can I do for it?" The sixth paragraph of Cao Wugang's Meilan story in Qing Dynasty: snow fragrance is rare in the sky and hard to find in the world. For a moment, I was dazed and at a loss.
usage
It refers to confusion
Chinese PinYin : shǒu zú shī cuò
at a loss
The peach and the plum become the same. táo lǐ chéng qī
show love and respect as good brothers should. xiōng yǒu dì gōng