aimless meaning: shooting arrows indiscriminately without an arrow and target, which is a metaphor for saying and doing things without looking at the object or having a clear goal.
aimless, a Chinese idiom, pronounced wú dì fàng shǐ, means that words and deeds have no clear purpose or are not practical. Mao Zedong's Transform Our Learning. Idiom explanation: yes: bull's-eye; Arrow: arrow. Shooting arrows without a goal is a metaphor for saying and doing things without a clear purpose or being unrealistic.
The origin of the idiom: Mao Zedong's "Transforming Our Learning": "It's not aimed at the target, but aimless." Idiom usage: continuous action; As predicate, attribute and object; With derogatory connotations.
1. In fact, all the energy you spend on balancing your career and family is aimless.
2. However, it's easy to point out that some other innovations have no aim at all or are blowing around, such as auctioning interest rate securities and debt-backed bonds.
3. Everyone knows, everyone can see, and everyone may have experienced that my truth statement is not free association and aimless here.
4. There are many eccentrics and conspirators among the critics, but their criticism is not aimless.
5. The authors who created them could not have been shooting at random.
6. In modern civilization, both moral philosophy and moral education have neglected or even dispelled the "impulsive ethics", which leads to the aimless ethical spirit.