meet on the battleground
In Chinese, the Pinyin is B ī NgR ó ngxi ā ngji à n, which means to solve problems by war. From the romance of Qing Dynasty. Bingrong: weapons. Meet by force.
The origin of Idioms
In the second chapter of the romance of the Qing Dynasty, Cai Dongfan said, "what qisa said is nothing but suojiaoni, kanwailan. Otherwise, if we meet each other in war, the difference is irrefutable and we have to pay it back." The second chapter of the third chapter of Wu Han's biography of Zhu Yuanzhang: "since the 16th year of Zhizheng, Zhang Shicheng and Zhu Yuanzhang have been fighting against each other in hundreds of battles, winning and losing each other."
Analysis of Idioms
Swords and soldiers meet
Idiom usage
Grammar: subject predicate; predicate and object; conflict of adjectives
Chinese PinYin : bīng róng xiāng jiàn
meet on the battleground
a mantis trying to stop a chariot. táng bì dāng chē
the bee acts as a go-between and the butterfly as an agent. fēng méi dié shǐ
tears and mucus flowing down rapidly. tì sì zòng héng
while i do nothing contrary to my good name. dé yīn mò wéi
persuade sb . to do good and dissuade him from doing evil. jìn kě tì fǒu
Golden rules and jade sentences. jīn zhāng yù jù