Curly shell
Shuo Ge Juan Jia, a Chinese idiom, is sh ù g ē Ju à NJI ǎ in pinyin, which means to tie up weapons and armor. It means to surrender. From the biography of Han Shizhong in the history of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Han Shizhong in the history of Song Dynasty, "Shizhong built his camp by riding alone at night and called out:" the army is here. I'm eager to put up my armor. I can protect you and share your fame. " The thief asked for help because he knelt down and drank the wine. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in war, etc
Chinese PinYin : shù gē juàn jiǎ
Curly shell
the monsters and freaks of all descriptions. niú guǐ shé shén
As long as you work hard, you can grind an iron pestle into a needle. zhǐ yào gōng fū shēn,tiě chǔ mó chéng zhēn
be distinguished from one's kind. xiù chū bān háng