invincible
Suxiang Kejie, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su à Xi à NGK è Ji é, which means that wherever the army goes, it can win. It comes from Li Zicheng, a vagrant in the history of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Volume 7 of Shengwu Ji written by Wei Yuan of Qing Dynasty: "the order is strict and clear, the direction is swift." Liu Kuiyi's biography of Huang Xing: "more than 600 people in the public sector have moved to Fangcheng and hengtan villages For two months, everything is successful. "
The origin of Idioms
In the history of Ming Dynasty, biography of vagrants, Li Zicheng: "Hong Chengchou took the place of he, Zhang Fuzhen took the place of Cheng Chou, and Cao Wenzhao and Yang Jiamo, the generals in charge, suppressed the vagrants. Their direction was conquered and Shaanxi was determined."
Chinese PinYin : suǒ xiàng kè jié
invincible
birth , death , illness and old age. shēng lǎo bìng sǐ