law of the jungle
The law of the jungle, a Chinese idiom, is Ru ò R ò uqi á ngsh í. It comes from the preface of sending Fu Tu Wen Chang Shi.
The law of the jungle is the most basic law in nature. It is not limited to eating and being eaten, killing and being killed. All behaviors related to competition can be called "the law of the jungle".
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu's preface to sending Fu Tu Wen Chang Shi: "weak meat, strong food." Liu Ji of the Ming Dynasty wrote in qinnvtixing: "you Sheng was unfortunately in troubled times, and the law of the jungle had no official punishment."
Discrimination of words
Antonym: to bully the weak, to bully others, to respect the strong, to win, to defeat the enemy
Idiom usage
It refers to natural competition. Example Liu Ji of the Ming Dynasty wrote in Qin Nu Ti Xing: "you Sheng is unfortunately in troubled times, and the law of the jungle has no official punishment." According to the epitaph of Shijun, the magistrate of Chongyang County, Hubei Province, written by Wei Yuan of the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "therefore, the control of Shengjian and the book battle of invading fishing are in a dilemma. They hold their own opinions and the law of the jungle is like a circle without reason." "ZHUGE Liang" and "a dou" since the Anti Japanese war by Zou Taofen.
Chinese PinYin : ruò ròu qiáng shí
law of the jungle
The slightest error is a thousand miles away. shī zhī háo lí,chà yǐ qiān lǐ
a cool breeze felt by all the guests. mǎn zuò fēng shēng