turn out in full strength
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ī ngch á och ū D ò ng, which means that the enemy sends all forces to invade. It comes from the inscription of Zhaowang in Anlu, Qi Dynasty.
Notes on Idioms
Tilt: pour out; nest: nest.
The origin of Idioms
According to the inscription of King Zhao of Qi gu'anlu written by Liang Shenyue in the Southern Dynasty, it is said that "when we pour our nests and lift them down, we can see that virtue is like returning home."
Idiom usage
To move all forces.
Examples
Chapter 6 of red rock by Luo guangbin: "even if the slightest wind and grass touch the spider silk and affect the spider web, it will immediately cause the spiders in this huge nest to rush out.
A few days ago, Feng Quji had expected that the Huns would go out and the rear area would be empty.
The enemy went out in full swing, just in the ambush of our army.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: no action
Chinese PinYin : qīng cháo chū dòng
turn out in full strength
Beyond the past and beyond the present. yuè gǔ chāo jīn
share with relatives and friends. zhān qīn dài gù
Cut the flesh and feed the tiger. gē ròu sì hǔ