utter disorder
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ā f ē iqu è Lu à n, describes a very chaotic appearance. It's from Qing Dynasty Hua Weisheng's about the injustice of founding the country.
The origin of Idioms
Hua Weisheng of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the strange injustice of the founding of the country, Yue Xu: "the most ridiculous is that those who raise the tone, teach and study as well as those who are in higher science all run away, only some ordinary students are left, and they are in a mess there."
Discrimination of words
A synonym for "flying in disorder"
Idiom usage
In a derogatory sense, it refers to a very disordered appearance.
Chinese PinYin : yā fēi què luàn
utter disorder
ride the wind and cleave the waves. cháng fēng pò làng
behead enemy generals and capture their flags. zhǎn jiàng duó qí
not to cause the slightest damage to the people. bǐ chàng bù jīng
many guests of exalted rank were present. gāo péng mǎn zuò
luxuriant growth of flowers and vegetation swaying. fēn hóng hài lǜ