the horses and men are strong
The Chinese idiom, R é nqi á NGM à Zhu à ng in pinyin, means that the army has a strong fighting capacity or a strong capacity. From Lao Sheng er.
The origin of Idioms
The first part of Yuan Dynasty's Wuhan minister's Lao sheng'er: "it can't make people strong, but it's just ghosts and gods."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, object; used in military affairs, etc. It is said that the Xiongnu relied on strong people to invade the Central Plains from time to time. In Ming Dynasty, the story of pingshantang in Qing Dynasty, the flying General of Li Guangshi in Han Dynasty, written by Hong Hong; in Ming Dynasty, the 55th chapter of Shuihu, written by Shi Naian, written by Gao Taiwei, Daxing three-way soldiers, huyanzhuo manipulates the chain horse, these three-way horse troopers are all well-trained men, strong men and strong horses, so there is no need for the palace commander to worry. Chapter 116 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms written by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: "the armor is frosty, the people are strong, and the prestige is awe inspiring." The second part of shouting Marquis's anger at Guan Ping written by Wu Mingshi of Ming Dynasty: "he has a large number of troops and strong men." Chapter 34 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty written by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty: "the Chu army has become a powerful force, and the troops of the Song Dynasty are afraid."
Chinese PinYin : rén qiáng mǎ zhuàng
the horses and men are strong
travel during the day and sleep at night. xiǎo xíng yè zhù
A floating mother makes a living. piāo mǔ jìn fàn
see through sb . 's treachery. dòng chá qí jiān