The spirit dissipates the courage
Qi Xiao Dan duo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ì Xi ā OD ǎ NDU ó, which means extreme fear. It comes from the biography of Hou Jing in southern history.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Hou jingzhuan, a southern historian, it is said that "at the beginning, the scenery surrounded the Taicheng City, and the reinforcements were 300000, while the soldiers looked at the qingpao, and then they lost their courage."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive.
Chinese PinYin : qì xiāo dǎn duó
The spirit dissipates the courage
elegant in manner , attitude and speech. wén cǎi fēng liú
have a remarkable flow of ideas. sī rú yǒng quán
a variation of a musical composition. yí shāng huàn yǔ