A truce
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Ji ě Ji ǎ Xi ū B ī ng, which means to take off the armor and let the soldiers rest. It means no more fighting. It comes from the stele of Huashan hall in Xiyue by Zhang Chang of Han Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Jiejiaxiushi
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing.
Examples
The Chinese side in Guizhou decided to turn the army against the enemy. The Northern Zhou Dynasty, Yu Xin's "Zhou Zhu Guo Chu Gong Qi Zhou CI Shi Murong Gong Shen Dao Bei"
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Chang of the Han Dynasty wrote in the inscription on the hall of Mount Hua in the West: "although Xiao Xiang helped him in the past, after he ranked first in the group, he was able to add to it, so he broke away from the army and did not fight."
Chinese PinYin : jiě jiǎ xiū bīng
A truce
The two heroes do not stand side by side. liǎng xióng bù bìng lì
get long out of short -- to make the best of a bad job. duǎn zhōng qǔ cháng