Explain the enemy
Jiebingshijia, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ě B ī ngsh ì Ji ǎ, which means to disarm and remove armor. It means no longer going to war. The source is "cutting down Jin and prospering Qi".
Idiom explanation
To release; release. Disarm. Take off your armor. It means no longer going to war.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth part of Ming Dynasty's Wumingshi's "cutting down the Jin and prospering the Qi Dynasty" is: "to liberate the troops and release the armor, to make the country peaceful and peaceful, and to make the people happy."
Idiom usage
Example: Chapter 67 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty: "the Qing family has horses. They leave in shock, and the soldiers chase them. They try their best to kill their horses, release their weapons, and observe them together."
Chinese PinYin : jiě bīng shì jiǎ
Explain the enemy
Show off to meet the traitor. mài qiào yíng jiān
speak the same with one's thought. xīn kǒu xiāng yīng
sit idle and eat , and in time one 's whole fortune will be used up. zuò chī shān bēng