The Imperial Guards
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is j ì ng ō ngq ǐ Nb ī ng, which means to stop fighting. In the old days, it was often used to praise Confucius. It comes from Chuang Tzu's Tianxia, which is "outside the forbidden army and inside the weak emotion".
Idiom explanation
Stop fighting
Idioms and allusions
Chuang Tzu's Tianxia says that song Chuan "took the forbidden army as the outside and the emotion as the inside". The second section of the third chapter of Liang Qichao's the general trend of the change of Chinese academic thought: "it's the duty to ban and attack the military."
Discrimination of words
As an object or attribute; of armistice
Chinese PinYin : jìn gōng qǐn bīng
The Imperial Guards
have experienced all hardships. tíng xīn zhù kǔ