A bow and arrow
GONGYA, a Chinese idiom, is g ā og ō NGJ í sh ǐ in pinyin, which means collecting GONGYA. The latter refers to the cessation of war. From Shi · Zhou Song · Shi Mai.
Idiom explanation
Refers to the collection of gongs and arrows. The latter refers to the cessation of war.
The origin of Idioms
"Shi · Zhou Song · Shi Mai" says: "it is the first time to fight, and the second time to bow and arrow."
Idiom usage
A truce refers to a truce. Why don't all the officials worry about the matter and want to fight against it? Xia Xie, Qing Dynasty, the similarities and differences between Chinese and Western chronicles.
Chinese PinYin : gāo gōng jí shǐ
A bow and arrow
graceful and handsome like a bird spreading its wings or a pheasant showing off its resplendent feather in flight -- descriptive of buildings. niǎo gé huī fēi
Turning hands is cloud, covering hands is rain. fān shǒu wéi yún,fù shǒu wéi yǔ