1
                           general:: 
                            Phrase(s): *a bull in a china shop 
Prov. a very clumsy creature in a delicate situation. (*Typically: as awkward as ~; like ~.)  •  I never know what to say at a funeral. I feel like a bull in a china shop, trampling on feelings without even meaning to.  •  Lester felt like a bull in a china shop; reaching for an orange, he made several elaborate pyramids of fruit tumble down.
                        
                        
 
                        
                            McGrawhill's American Idioms And Phrasal Verbs
                        
                        
                    
                    
                        2
                           general:: 
                            An extremely clumsy person, as in Her living room, with its delicate furniture and knickknacks, made him feel like a bull in a china shop. The precise origin for this term has been lost; it was first recorded in Frederick Marryat's novel, Jacob Faithful (1834).
                        
                        
 
                        
                            American Heritage Idioms