a lonely horseman
It's a Chinese idiom. Its pronunciation is p ǐ m ǎ D ā nqi ā ng, which means to fight alone. It means acting alone without help. From Wujiang.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: single horse; antonym: many people, many people
The origin of Idioms
Wu Jiang, a poem written by Wang Zun of Chu Dynasty in the Five Dynasties, said: "the soldiers scattered their bows, and the tiger's might was defeated, and each horse broke through the siege with a single shot." In the Song Dynasty, Shi Daoyuan's biography of lanterns in Jingde, a monk in Ruzhou South courtyard: "how about a single shot? The teacher said, "treat me with a stick. '”
Idiom usage
In Nie Gannu's on the crow, it is said that "when a man was young and strong, when he was young and strong, in today's society, as long as he was not deaf or dumb, he had no ambition."
Chinese PinYin : pǐ mǎ dān qiāng
a lonely horseman
prize one copper as highly as one 's life. yī wén rú mìng
one's face glowing with health. róng guāng huàn fā
rely through one's own efforts. zì lì gēng shēng
even the grandest feast must have an end. shèng yán bì sàn
return kindness with ingratitude evil for good. ēn jiāng chóu bào
people who are mere pecks and hampers. dǒu shāo zhī rén