pitch camp
An Ying Xia Zhai, a Chinese idiom, means troops are stationed. It also refers to the establishment of temporary labor or work base. It's from traveling alone.
Idiom explanation
[idiom]: anyingxiazhai [Pinyin]: Anny í ngxi à zh à I à [explanation]: anyingxiazhai: establishment and placement; Zhai: fence for defense. The stationing of troops. It also refers to the establishment of temporary labor or work base.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: Yuan Wumingshi's Zaju Qizi: "today, I'm leading 100000 soldiers here. It's not far from Xuzhou. I'm camping in Qingfengling."
Discrimination of words
[phonetic code]: Ayxz [synonym]: camp and camp in Xiazhai [antonym]: ban Shi Hui Chao [usage]: as predicate, object and attribute; indicating the troops are stationed [English]: pitchacamp example of idiom Teach and discuss. The 11th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty and the 79th chapter of annals of the states in the Eastern Zhou Dynasty: "ten miles apart, each camp. Two challenges, no division. " (3) Li Yu in Qing Dynasty wrote "how to save sheep in the sky": "I expected that he met with heavy snow and didn't know his way, so he must ~"
Chinese PinYin : ān yíng xià zhài
pitch camp
disappear like snow when hot water is thrown on it. rú tāng pō xuě
Drinking water to know the source. yǐn shuǐ zhī yuán
draw the bow both on the left and right. zuǒ yòu kāi gōng