Powerful enemy
Shi Jun Li Di, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ì J ū NL ì D í, meaning that both sides are equal in strength, regardless of height. It comes from the biography of Su Zhe in the history of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Su Zhe in the history of Song Dynasty: "Lv Huiqing began to flatter Wang Anshi and advocated abusive politics to harm the world. If the enemy is strong and powerful, he will fall into Anshi, which is worse than the enemy, especially in the world. "
Analysis of Idioms
A close match
Antonym: a world of difference
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive; used of both sides of a conflict
Chinese PinYin : shì jūn lì dí
Powerful enemy
It's better to see it in person than to hear it. chuán wén bù rú qīn jiàn
goods overflow and people are happy. mín ān wù fù
beautifully designed and bound book. jīn tí yù xiè
Say all you know and say all you can. zhī wú bù yán,yán wú bù jìn
to hold on to one job while seeking a better one. qí mǎ xún mǎ