mobilize too many troops
It's a Chinese idiom, pronounced L á OSH ī D ò ngzh ò ng, which means to send out a large number of troops. Now it means to use a lot of manpower or make a fuss. From the romance of Fengshen.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 81 of the romance of the gods by Xu Zhonglin of the Ming Dynasty: "elder brother, you don't have to work hard to arouse the public. He will do everything naturally and let others know that we have no limits. ——It was so quiet that more than 600000 Zhou soldiers died out naturally. "
Analysis of Idioms
It's a waste of money and money. It's a big fight
Idiom usage
It's ridiculous to make trouble for such a little Mormon. The sixty eighth chapter of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in Qing Dynasty
Idiom explanation
Labor: fatigue, hard work; division, public: Army; action: mobilization, mobilization. It originally meant sending out a large number of troops. Now it means that a lot of manpower is used.
Chinese PinYin : láo shī dòng zhòng
mobilize too many troops
Close the door to raise a tiger. guān mén yǎng hǔ,hǔ dà shāng rén
To be spared in the face of difficulties. lín nàn gǒu miǎn
be sated with food and lead an idle life. bǎo shí zhōng rì
tears trickling down one 's cheeks. shān rán lèi xià