lay down weapons and strip off armour
Daoge Jiejia, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǎ og ē Xi è Ji ǎ, which means to give up arms and admit defeat. It's from the record of continued biographies.
Analysis of Idioms
Betray the enemy and abandon the enemy
The origin of Idioms
In Song Dynasty, Wei Bai's xuchuandenglu: "when Xuefeng is three times up, it's nine to Dongshan, why is it so bad?"
Idiom usage
To admit defeat and surrender. In Chapter 30 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty, the first failure of the Warring States official Ferry: robbing WuChao and burning mengde's grain: "the two fell to the ground." In the 33rd chapter of the romance of the Three Kingdoms written by Luo Guanzhong in the Ming Dynasty, Cao Pi took advantage of the chaos to accept the Zhen's family. Guo Jia's legacy and planned Liaodong: "suddenly, a young tiger army came, and it was Yuan Xi's Ministry Jiao Qian and Zhang Nan. We should guide our troops to meet them. The second general has come to surrender. " In the 62nd chapter of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty, taking Yanggao from Fuguan and attacking Luocheng, Huang Wei contending for meritorious service, it is said that Xuande has set up the flag of escape from death, but the soldiers in Sichuan are not allowed to be killed, if the wounded pay for their lives. It is also told that all the soldiers in Ru Chuan have their parents and wives, and those who are willing to surrender will be put back into the army, but those who are unwilling to surrender will be put back So the sound of joy moved the ground "Ah! He forgets his soul and how to return to his hometown when he's killed. He'll come back to his hometown when he's killed. " Why is it that the snow peak has three pitches and nine to Dongshan? (xuzhuandenglu by Wei Bai in Song Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : dǎo gē xiè jiǎ
lay down weapons and strip off armour
a thorn for a hairpin and plain cloth for a skirt. chāi jīng qún bù
A foot of water makes ten feet of waves. yī chǐ shuǐ shí zhàng bō
standing like a tripod -- a tripartite balance of forces. dǐng zú ér jū
said of having sexual intercourse. wū shān yún yǔ