Strong food
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Qi ǎ ngsh í m í Ji ǎ o, which means to be full of food and strive to win. From Liezi Shuo Fu.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
The origin of Idioms
"Liezi Shuo Fu" says: "the winner is the winner, and it is also a beast." Yin Jingshun's explanation: "Han Shi waizhuan says:" it's all over the world. " "Lu's spring and Autumn Annals" says: "horn, try your strength." This is a saying that people value profit but despise Tao. They only have food. It's just like animals and animals fighting for victory when they are full of food. " In a word, it's called "Mo" when you read it all. It's called "Mo" when you read it all.
Idiom explanation
It's about having enough to fight.
Chinese PinYin : qiǎng shí mí jiǎo
Strong food
the breeze is light , the moon is bright. fēng qīng yuè lǎng
Different ice and charcoal vessels. bīng tàn bù tóng qì
veteran soldiers and able captains. jīng bīng qiáng jiàng
will never forget to the end of one 's days. mò chǐ bù wàng