sally forth in full strength to
Pour out the nest, a Chinese idiom, pronounced Q ī ngch á o é RCH ū, means that the enemy sent out all forces to invade. It comes from the inscription of Zhaowang in Anlu, Qi Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Spare no effort to get out of the city
Idiom usage
People who don't usually go out of the house, these two days, too. (Chapter 12 of Duanmu Hongliang's Cao Xueqin)
The origin of Idioms
In the inscription of King Zhao of Qi gu'anlu written by Liang Shenyue in the Southern Dynasty, it is said that "if you pour your nest and lift it down, you will be able to return to virtue."
Chinese PinYin : qīng cháo ér chū
sally forth in full strength to
loving care a mother gives to her child. wēi gàn bì shī
go through thick and thin together. tóng shēng sǐ,gòng cún wáng