Be a target
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ē nd ā ngsh ǐ sh í, which means to resist the enemy's attack personally. From the book of Jin, biography of Wang Jian.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Jin, biography of Wang Jianzhuan, it is said that the two emperors, Gao and Guangwu of the former Han Dynasty, had no distance to fight, and no size to fight. They would shake the drum with their hands, be the target of the stone, keep out the wind and rain, and not support the pot slurry
Idiom usage
He is very brave. Example Shizu encouraged Li's officers and men to be the target of the war. After a stalemate for several days, Tai (DU Tai) went through. In the book of Chenshu Shizu Ji, Zhuge Jin and bu Lian said: "I saw Yu as my favorite in the past, entered my heart and brawn, came out as my pawn, and ordered me to go out to fight. I was the target of my life. So I could destroy Cao Cao in Wulin, walk Cao Ren in Yingdu, and promote the country's prestige. China is an earthquake, stupid and Jingjing, and I can't help but obey him. Although uncle Fang of Zhou and the letter and cloth of Han, I can't respect him.
Chinese PinYin : shēn dāng shǐ shí
Be a target
take a turn for the better and be out of danger. zhuǎn wēi wéi ān
discussion as to who is right and who is wrong. shuō duǎn dào cháng
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. wò hǔ cáng lóng