to be completely destroyed
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is pi à NJI à B à Hu á n, which means that the whole army has been destroyed. From the history after Zen
The origin of Idioms
The 27th chapter of the history of the empress of Chan Zhen written by Fang Ruhao of Ming Dynasty: "let's leave an army to guard the pass, waiting for the officers and soldiers of Governor Liu's rear team, killing and teaching him not to return, and then we call him happy!"
Idiom usage
It is used as attributive and complement to describe the annihilation of the whole army.
Examples
If we want to transfer and improve society, we have to step forward and fight with these things, killing them to pieces! (12) Ye Shengtao's Ni Huanzhi
Chinese PinYin : piàn jiǎ bù huán
to be completely destroyed
advance by an inch but retreat by a foot -- to lose much more than what one gets. jǐn cùn tuì chǐ
There is a clash between the two. àng yú xiāng jī
have a good idea of how things stand. xiōng zhōng yǒu shù