To pull a sword to destroy Tibet
Lhasa is a Chinese word, which means destroying setbacks.
Explanation of Idioms
The pronunciation of the word "La Ji De Zang" is "La Ji"; the pronunciation of "La Ji De Zang" is "La Ji"; the pronunciation of "La Ji De Zang" is "La Ji"; the pronunciation of "La Ji De Zang" is "La Ji"; the pronunciation of "La Ji De Zang" is "La Ji"; the pronunciation of "La Ji De Zang" is "La Ji"; the pronunciation of "La Ji Ji De Zang" is "La Ji". It refers to a setback. The source of Zuo Si's Wu Du Fu in the Jin Dynasty: "it's impossible for him to defeat the awn and destroy Tibet."
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: pull: break; maneuver: fight with both hands; destroy: bruise. It refers to a setback. degree of common use: rare emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: as predicate and attribute; used in written language idiom structure: combined generation time: Ancient
Chinese PinYin : lā bǎi cuī cáng
To pull a sword to destroy Tibet
treasure a thing by wrapping it up carefully. shí xí zhēn cáng
The army did not move, food and grass first. bīng mǎ wèi dòng, liáng cǎo xiān xíng