the army is completely wiped out
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is pi à NJI à B à C ú n, which means not a piece of armor has been preserved. It describes the total annihilation of the army. It comes from the story of Huansha · Diezhong written by Liang Chenyu in Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Liang Chenyu's "Huansha Ji · Diezhong" in Ming Dynasty: "my husband was sent to accept Chu Fu Yue Yesterday, he sent Tai Zai to lead an army to fight Qi on the top of Ai Ling, killing him to pieces. "
Idiom usage
The whole army is destroyed
Examples
If we take advantage of it, we will know what we are interested in. The second chapter of the romance of Fengshen by Xu Zhonglin in Ming Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
There is nothing left
Chinese PinYin : piàn jiǎ bù cún
the army is completely wiped out
be endowed with both beauty and talent. cái mào liǎng quán
of men shouting and horses neighing. rén hǎn mǎ sī
Sacrifice one's body to one's country. juān qù xùn guó
The wolf and the babbler are frightened. láng gù qiān jīng