charge into the enemy ranks
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ē NGF ē ngxi à nzh è n, which means to attack and trap, describes the fighting bravery. It was first written by Wang Shen in the period of Cao Wei.
The origin of Idioms
It was originally from the book of Wei written by Wang Shen in the period of Cao Wei.
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute to describe bravery in battle. In the book of Wei written by Cao Wei and Wang Shen: "Sun Quan led a hundred thousand people to encircle Hefei, and the Liao Dynasty raised eight hundred people who dared to die. They went to the front and set up a battle to break it." In the book baopuzi zaying written by Ge Hong in the Eastern Jin Dynasty, it is said that "the emperor tried to be around, and dozens of people often took the lead, and they were not hurt all their lives."
Chinese PinYin : dēng fēng xiàn zhèn
charge into the enemy ranks
bitter as if it were malt sugar. gān zhī rú yí
Fighting against water and activating scale. dòu shuǐ huó lín