be dizzy
Dizziness, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ó uy ū nm ù Xu à n, which means dizziness, feeling everything spinning; sometimes it also describes being overwhelmed by complicated things. It comes from a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin.
The origin of Idioms
The sixth chapter of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty: "everything in the room is dazzling, making people dizzy."
Idiom usage
He felt dizzy when he was so angry that he became unconscious. Seeing your question makes me dizzy. I don't know how to answer it. the prosperity of the urban world makes me feel dizzy and dizzy. I don't feel the tranquility of the countryside. seeing this bizarre political situation, Shanghai people have to be dizzy and frightened. ——Ouyang mountain "struggle" (people's education press Chinese seventh grade volume 1 Lesson 17 "step, step again") I look down from the edge of the cliff, feel dizzy; I absolutely can't climb down, I will slip and die. seeing this bizarre political situation, Shanghai people have to be dizzy and frightened. Ouyang Shan's struggle
Chinese PinYin : tóu yūn mù xuàn
be dizzy
There is no tile in the top and no cone in the bottom. shàng wú piàn wǎ,xià wú zhuō zhuī
correct evil doings and revert to good deeds. gǎi guò qiān shàn
as similar as the two halves of a tally. ruò hé fú jié
as different as heaven and hell. tiān yuān zhī gé