A wave of arms
It is a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is Hu à NJI à Hu à g à, which means wearing armor and holding weapons. It is used to describe fully armed, brave and indomitable. It is also called "fighting with armor" and "fighting with armor". From Zuo Zhuan, the second year of Chenggong.
Idiom explanation
擐: put it on. Armor: armor. Gore: weapons.
The origin of Idioms
In the second year of Chenggong, Zuo Zhuan, written by Zuo Qiuming in the spring and Autumn period, it is said that "if you are a soldier, you will die."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in war, etc. Example: Fu yongzhuan in the book of Wei states: "in order to fight, only Cai Sanhu, the leader of the army, was the first to enter, and no one else could."
Chinese PinYin : huàn jiǎ huī gē
A wave of arms
Go through the butcher's gate and chew. guò tú mén ér dà jiáo
the country is faced with a crisis. guó nàn dāng tóu
so poor as to have no room to stick an awl on. pín wú lì zhuī
Painful sores caused by mutual denudation. hù bō tòng chuāng
each trying to cheat or outwit the other. ěr yú wǒ zhà
with circulation of a manifesto , the trouble is settled. yǐ ruò zhì qiáng
involved and abstruse writing. gōu zhāng jí jù