be good at arrow-shooting
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ǐ B ù x ū f ā, meaning that every arrow hits the target. It's very good at archery. It comes from the biography of the six kings of the Ming and Yuan Dynasties.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of the six kings of the Ming and Yuan Dynasties in the book of Wei, "when the chariot returned to the palace of health, ten thousand riders chased it, and dozens of riders attacked it. They were all dead."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and object
Examples
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 17 of "the second moment makes a case of surprise": "look carefully at the arrow shaft, there are two lines of fine words, saying:" if you do not waste your hair, your hair will respond to the string. "
In the Qing Dynasty, Chu people won the 94th chapter of the romance of Sui and Tang Dynasties: "Jiyun went straight to the crowd, shooting left and right, and all thieves were conquered."
Volume 66 of Yiwen leiju quoted from the pheasant Qi for the emperor's Prince Xie Ciyu written by Liang Shenyue in the Southern Dynasty: "the light Luan moves, the dense Yi spreads slowly, the yellow room is enough, and the arrow is not empty."
Chinese PinYin : shǐ bù xū fā
be good at arrow-shooting
feel sad for the loss of one 's kind. tù sǐ hú bēi
carry out a death sentence on the spot. jiù dì zhèng fǎ
the blood of loyal courtiers who die unjustly become jasper. cháng hóng huà bì
everything comes to him who waits. yǒu zhì jìng chéng