lose one's soul and bravery
The Chinese idiom, w á NGH ú ns à NGD à n in pinyin, means to be extremely frightened. It comes from Ming Dynasty's Wumingshi's breaking the sky array.
Idiom usage
I owe to King dingyang, who made me a pioneer. He robbed three passes every day and eight stockaded villages at night, killing the Tang family.
Analysis of Idioms
Lose one's heart
The origin of Idioms
In Ming Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "breaking the sky array" said: "kill Xiongnu and lose heart, protect Xianning for thousands of years."
Idiom explanation
It describes panic and fear to the extreme.
Chinese PinYin : wáng hún sàng dǎn
lose one's soul and bravery
unwilling to remain out of the limelight. bù gān jì mò
inhale wind and drink dew -- to endure the hardship of travelling or fieldwork. xī fēnɡ yǐn lù
have sufficient grounds for one 's views. chí zhī yǒu gù