The phrase is "Bull in a china shop." Picture a giant creature weighing a ton. Picture this store with all these dainty little porcelain objects. Picture the shopkeeper as she is about to see thousands in inventory about to be shattered.
It means that Cassie is very clumsy like a bull in a china shop.
A bull could get into a china shop if it had escaped from a nearby farm or field. Similarly, if the china shop had left a door open then any type of animal could get in.
the phrase is ' as potentially destructive as a bull....'
The expression is usually "a bull in a china shop" as we see it. This might just be a variation on the theme.
A bull in a china shop, refers to someone who is clumsy or too rough. China is fine dishware and easily broken. could you imagine if someone let a bull loose in a shop that sold china, it would be a mess.
sin ju sen tonakitara
A bull in a China shop is an idiom meaning that a person is dealing or has dealt with with another person or people in a clumsy manner. If it is related to one incident that is not the norm for the person, it would be remarked upon in the following way: " Geez, I was lacking sleep when I spoke to my class about my experiences and I fear I came off like a bull in a China shop. I hope I didn't come off insensitively when I was trying to get the message across to others." ......................................................................................................................................................................... If someone is like a bull in a china shop, they are very careless in the way that they move or behave, such a person breaks things or often makes mistakes or causes damage in situations that require careful thinking or behavior. eg We told her it was a delicate situation but she went into the meeting like a bull in a china shop.
ElephantCowHorseBearHippoRhinoMoose
like a bull in a china shopshop 'til you drop
It was first recorded in Frederick Marryat's novel, Jacob Faithful (1834).
I have been told it is from an ancestor of mine in Ireland (surname bull) who caused a commotion in a china shop, however most people now associate this idiom with animals.