Idioms and poems describing being unaware or confused

1. Zhi drunken gold fan

Pinyin: zhǐ zuì jīn mí

Explanation: The original meaning is to make people confused by the shining gold paper. Describe the luxurious and prosperous environment that makes people indulge.

2. Perseverance

Pinyin: zhí mí bù wù

Definition: Persistence: stubbornness, perseverance; Mi: confusion; Wu: awakening. Persist in mistakes without realizing it.

3. Misty and foggy

Pinyin: yún wù mí méng

Definition: Misty: describes a vague appearance. The clouds and fog shrouded the scenery, making the scenery blurry and unclear.

4. Enchanted

Pinyin: xīn zuì hún mí

Definition: To describe admiration of love to the extreme.

5. The heart is swaying and the mind is fascinated

Pinyin: xīn dàng shén mí

Definition: dang: shaking. Describes being unsettled and having difficulty controlling oneself.

6. Tiantai Road Fan

Pinyin: tiān tái lù mí

Interpretation: Tiantai: the name of the mountain, in the north of Tiantai County, Zhejiang Province today. It originally refers to straying into the fairyland and getting lost. Later it was used to describe a bleak future with no way to go.

7. Phlegm confuses the mind

Pinyin: tán mí xīn qiào

Definition: refers to stroke coma. It also describes being obsessed with something and losing your mind.

8. Confusing

Pinyin: pū shuò mí lí

Definition: It refers to the difficulty in distinguishing the male and female rabbits. Describes things that are complicated and difficult to distinguish clearly.

9. Get rid of superstition

Pinyin: pò chú mí xìn

Interpretation: Originally refers to freedom from the shackles of religious superstition. Now also refers to emancipating the mind, eliminating the sense of inferiority, and establishing a new style of daring to think, dare to speak, and dare to do.

10. 目MI五色

Pinyin: mù mí wǔ sè

Definition: Five colors: various colors. Describes the many and complex colors, making it difficult to see clearly. It means that things are complicated and difficult to distinguish clearly.

11. Know your way back once you have lost your way

Pinyin: mí tú zhī fǎn

Interpretation: You will know your way back after you have lost your way. It is a metaphor for discovering that you have made a mistake and knowing how to correct it.

12. Recognition of shadows by confusing the head

Pinyin: mí tóu rèn yǐng

Interpretation: Buddhist language. The description is very confusing.

13. Charming eyes

Pinyin: mí rén yǎn mù

Definition: To confuse other people’s sight and make them unclear. Refers to playing tricks to deceive people.

14. Obsessed with skeletons

Pinyin: mí liàn hài gǔ

Interpretation: Obsessed: excessive love and hard to give up; skeleton: corpse bones. Obsessed with corpses. It is a metaphor for being reluctant to throw away old and decayed things.

15. Confused and confusing

Pinyin: mí lí pū shuò

Definition: To describe things that are complicated and difficult to distinguish clearly.