with both civil and military ability
Jingwenweiwu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NGW é NW ě IW ǔ, which means the ability to govern the country, which is possessed by both the literati and the martial arts. From the music of dingzongmiao.
The origin of Idioms
Xu Jingzong of the Tang Dynasty wrote in the music discussion of dingzong Temple: "if you can't get the miraculous work of restoring the holy trace early, you can't get it. If you are good at literature and martial arts, you dare to send it to a famous saying."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Jingwu Weiwen
Idiom usage
Used to govern a country. The seventy second chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty: "it is said that Zixu, a member of the Wu Dynasty, is a Jianli man. He was born with a height of ten feet, a waist of ten girths, a broad eyebrow, and an electric vision. He has the courage to carry the mountains and the talent to write and write."
Chinese PinYin : jīng wén wěi wǔ
with both civil and military ability