put on one 's armour and take up armshuang
It is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ī Ji ǎ zh í B ī ng, which means wearing protective clothes and holding weapons. Full armed. It comes from the Han Dynasty, Gaozu Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the Han Dynasty, XunYue's "Han Ji · Gaozu Ji", it is said that "the officials were under the command of a, and more than a hundred battles."
Idiom usage
Zhang Junfang of the Song Dynasty "seven signatures of Cloud Collection" volume 113: "to dawn, the cave is dim, but into more than ten miles, you can see the Jincheng jiangque between the ravines, and it is guarded by the soldiers of a"
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: armed by a, armed by a
Chinese PinYin : pī jiǎ zhí bīng
put on one 's armour and take up armshuang
lay more stress on the past than on the present. hòu gǔ bó jīn
There are no people here, there will be places for them. cǐ chǔ bù liú rén,huì yǒu liú rén chǔ
A hundred generations of passers-by. bǎi dài guò kè
The mouth is choked up like a stream. kǒu yōng ruò chuān
be scrupulously honest even when there is no one around. bù qī àn shì