opportunity
Opportunity, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ě ch é ngzh ī J ī, which means available time. It comes from the biography of Lu Zuan in the book of Jin.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Lu Zuan in the book of Jin: "it is appropriate to repair the armour and cultivate the sharp, persuade the class farmers to cultivate, wait for the opportunity to take advantage of, and then wipe out at one stroke."
Idiom usage
To be formal; to be an object; to be derogatory. In Song Dynasty Chao Buzhi's Ji Li Ji: "when it is, there is a gap to take advantage of, but China can't take it." In Chapter 120 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty, recommending Du Yu's old general to offer a new plan to subdue SUN Hao, it is said that when Yanghu heard that Lu resisted the strike, SUN Hao lost his virtue and saw that Wu had an opportunity to take advantage of it, he sent people to Luoyang to ask him to subdue Wu. After Zhao Yi's "notes on the twenty four histories, volume two and sixteen, peace talks" was transferred to the south of Song Dynasty, there was no chance to take advantage of it.
Chinese PinYin : kě chéng zhī jī
opportunity
capture troublemakers and fight evil-forces. qín jiān tǎo bào
enteroclysis and gastrolavage. guā cháng xǐ wèi
console the people and punish the wicked. diào mín fá zuì