invincible
Invincible, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su ǒ D ā NGW ú D í, meaning invincible. It's powerful and invincible. It comes from the historical records of Xiang Yu by Sima Qian of the Western Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the Western Han Dynasty, Sima Qian's historical records, Xiang Yu's biography said, "I know the elder, I ride this horse for five years. I am invincible. I travel thousands of miles a day, and I can't bear to kill it, so I can give it to the elder."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Examples
I'm five years old on this horse. I'm invincible.
Chinese PinYin : suǒ dāng wú dí
invincible
Eight difficulties and three disasters. bā nàn sān zāi
All the people swear at each other. zhòng kǒu jiāo lì
to start a fight in sb . else 's house. rù shǐ cāo gē
courage of a warrior and the soul of a musician. jiàn tai xiāo xīn