lack soldiers and leaders
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ī NGW ē Iji à nggu ǎ, which means that there are not many major generals, and it describes weak strength. It comes from Pinghua in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
Idiom usage
Wang Shichong has a small number of soldiers, but I have a large number of soldiers and a strong army.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: more troops, more generals
The origin of Idioms
Pinghua in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Zhang Fei three out of Xiaopei: "Naibei is weak, the moat is shallow, the city is low, there is an emergency, the danger of exhaustion."
Idiom explanation
Small, few: few. There are not many major generals. It's weak.
Chinese PinYin : bīng wēi jiàng guǎ
lack soldiers and leaders
gain victory with unstained swords. bīng bù wū rèn
a man should be independent at the age of thirty. sān shí ér lì
violent political or social upheavals. tiān bēng dì jiě