you can fight a hundred battles with no danger of defeat
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B à izh à Nb à D à I, which means to experience many battles without being in danger. It describes being good at using troops. It's from Sun Tzu's attack.
The origin of Idioms
Sun Tzu's attack: "a man who knows his enemy and friend will win a hundred battles."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute, with commendatory meaning to describe winning every battle. example since ancient times, famous generals have expected the enemy to win and trained soldiers, so they can go through fire and water without danger. An excerpt from the biography of Liu bingzhuan in the history of the Jin Dynasty says: if you know your enemy and your friend, you will win every battle; if you don't know your enemy and your friend, you will win every battle; if you don't know your enemy and your friend, you will lose every battle. main idea: if you know the enemy and yourself, you can win every battle; if you don't know the enemy, you only know yourself, and you are half likely to win or lose; if you don't know the enemy and you don't know yourself, you will lose every battle.
Analysis of Idioms
It can not be read as "t á I". I can't write "to be".
Chinese PinYin : bǎi zhàn bù dài
you can fight a hundred battles with no danger of defeat
die for the sake of righteousness. kāng kǎi fù yì
To transfer money from one's ruminant to another's. fēi chú zhuǎn xiǎng
pretending to be what one is not. rén mú gǒu yàng
wink and make signs to one another. jǐ méi liū yǎn