Plenty of food and plenty of grass
There is a Chinese idiom, Li á ngdu ō C ǎ Ogu ǎ ng in pinyin, which means there are enough supplies for war. It comes from Ming Dynasty's Wumingshi's peach garden Jieyi.
source
The first fold of Ming Dynasty's Wumingshi's Taoyuan Jieyi: "Puzhou is a vast place with plenty of food and grass. It's a hero of the army and the people. Why don't I fight and sow chaos."
interpretation
[explanation]: it refers to sufficient war supplies. [from]: the first fold of Ming Dynasty's Wumingshi's Taoyuan Jieyi: "Puzhou is a vast place with plenty of food and grass. It's a hero of the army and the people. Why don't I fight and sow chaos." [grammar]: combined; used as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning
Chinese PinYin : liáng duō cǎo guǎng
Plenty of food and plenty of grass
Catch the chicken and scold the dog. zhuō jī mà gǒu
every footstep makes a lily grow -- the mincing steps of a beautiful woman. bù bù lián huā
well-known mountains and rivers. míng shān shèng chuān