fire at the target a hundred times without a single miss
A hundred hits a hundred, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǎ if ā B ǎ izh ò ng, which means to shoot an arrow or a gun accurately and hit the target every time. It also means to have a full grasp of things. It comes from the strategies of the Warring States period and the Western Zhou Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"The strategy of the Warring States period · the strategy of the Western Zhou Dynasty" says: "Chu has those who are good at shooting. They shoot at the willow leaves with a hundred steps, and hit a hundred goals."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, attributive and complement to describe the skill of shooting and absolute assurance in handling affairs.
Examples
When I saw Ziya, I kowtowed to the ground: "the prime minister's brilliant plan is a hundred hits." ——Chapter 36 of the romance of the gods by Xu Zhonglin of Ming Dynasty. ——A dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin and Gao E in the Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : bǎi fā bǎi zhòng
fire at the target a hundred times without a single miss
kill a chicken with a butcher 's big knife. niú dāo gē jī
grow up from the filthy mud without being polluted. chū chén bù rǎn
it is beyond logic and above reason. bù kě sī yì
submissively to hear and obey. fǔ shǒu tīng mìng
a man should take a wife and a woman should take a husband. nán hūn nǚ pìn