come out victorious in successive battles
A Chinese idiom, Li á nzh à NJI à Ji é in pinyin, means that one after another good results are achieved in sports competitions or examinations; one after another victory is achieved in wars. It comes from the book of song: preface to the book of song.
explain
1. One after another we won wars. 2. It refers to the successive good results in sports competitions or examinations.
source
Preface to the book of the Song Dynasty: both successive battles were successful, and the banner of Shi Ma was very prosperous. "Guanyuan Ji · Leyi attacking Qi" by Zhang Fengyi of the Ming Dynasty: in recent days, he has won successive battles and has been down to more than 70 cities in Qi.
Discrimination
Synonym: win all battles; antonym: lose all battles and lose all the time
Chinese PinYin : lián zhàn jiē jié
come out victorious in successive battles
Break through the strong and destroy the sharp. chōng jiān huǐ ruì
Quiet words and plain words. jìng yán yōng huí
behave in a noisy , gay and boisterous manner. xī pí xiào liǎn
Ascending mountains to pick pearls. shēng shān cǎi zhū