Get rid of your clothes
Jieyijiejia, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ě y ī Xi è Ji ǎ, which means to take off the battle clothes, take off the grey armour, which means no longer fighting. It comes from Xing Lin Zhuang by Ming Wu Ming.
Idiom usage
No more fighting, no more bows, no more bows and arrows.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: explaining the enemy
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of Xing Lin Zhuang written by Wu Mingshi in Ming Dynasty: "if he's ready to go to heaven, he'll be a marquis in his class."
Idiom explanation
Take off: take off. Take off the battle clothes and take off the grey armor. The metaphor is no longer fighting.
Chinese PinYin : jiě yī xiè jiǎ
Get rid of your clothes
all that have been achieved is spoiled. qián gōng jìn miè
pins awry and hair in disorder. chāi héng bìn luàn
the mellowness of natural condition and social customs of a place. lián quán ràng shuǐ