Avoid their spirit and strike them lazy
It is an idiom to avoid its spirit and strike its indolence. Its pronunciation is B ì Q í Ru ì Q ì, J ī Q í Du ò Gu ī. It means always avoiding the momentum of the enemy when they first arrive, and then hitting them hard when they are tired. The source of Sun Tzu's battle for the Army: "therefore, those who are good at using military force should avoid their spirit and attack their indolence. This is also the rule of Qi."
meaning
His spirit: brave momentum; indolence: lax. Those who are good at using troops always avoid the momentum of the enemy when they first come and strike hard when they are tired.
Extension
For example, when Sun Tzu said "to", he meant to make the enemy tired and depressed in order to reduce his advantage. The grammar of Mao Zedong's strategic issues in China's Revolutionary War
history
In 684 BC, the state of Qi bullied the weak and attacked the state of Lu. Duke Zhuang of Lu led his army to meet the enemy in Changshao. The two armies met and the Qi army beat the battle drum. Under the leadership of Cao GUI, the Lu army didn't beat the drum to avoid its spirit. Qi army's morale was low when they beat drums for the third time, but Lu army beat drums for the first time. The Lu army relied on the morale of one morale to defeat the Qi army with less.
Chinese PinYin : bì qí ruì qì,jī qí duò guī
Avoid their spirit and strike them lazy
Thirty six stratagems. sān shí liù jì,zǒu wéi shàng jì
the lowly carry little authority. rén wēi quán qīng