place open to attack from all directions
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ì zh à nzh ī D ì, which means a place that is flat on all sides and vulnerable to attack. It comes from biographies of Yue Yi in historical records and biographies of Xun Yu in later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Biographies of Yue Yi in historical records: "Zhao is in the fourth World War, and his people are learning to fight against him." In the biography of Xunzhou in the later Han Dynasty: "Yingchuan is in the position of four wars. The world has changed, and it is often called bingchong."
Idiom usage
Yingchuan is a place of four wars. The world has changed. It is often called bingchong. In the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Fan Ye's biography of Xun Yu in the later Han Dynasty and the annals of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, chapter 93: "King Wuling (Zhao) thinks that the state of Zhao is located in Yan in the north, Hu in the East, and Linhu and Loufan in the West. He is adjacent to Zhao and separated by a river. He is in a position of four wars and is afraid that the sun will be weak."
Chinese PinYin : sì zhàn zhī dì
place open to attack from all directions
fearful with a guilty conscience. huái zhe guǐ tāi
suffering from constant chronic illness. bìng mó chán shēn
having a heart but no strength. yǒu xīn wú lì
eagerly await the return of one 's son. yǐ mén yǐ lǚ