Add fuel to reduce fuel consumption
Adding troops to reduce fuel, pronounced Ti ā Nb ī ngji ǎ NZ à o, is an idiom, which refers to camouflage soldiers to flee and show weakness to deceive each other. It comes from the biography of Sun Tzu Wu Qi in historical records.
Source: biography of Sun Tzu Wuqi in historical records: "it will be 100000 stoves for Qi army to enter Wei, 50000 stoves tomorrow, and 30000 stoves tomorrow. Pang Juan walked for three days and was overjoyed. He said, "I firmly know that Qi Jun is timid. If I enter my land for three days, more than half of the soldiers have died."
Example: then you are Sun Bin of Qi, the Marquis of Shu, who called the rain and the wind, and taught the clever plan in person. The second discount of Yuan Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's hundred flowers Pavilion
Story: during the Warring States period, Pang Juan, a disciple of Guiguzi, a master of military science, asked the king of Wei to harm his younger martial brother Sun Bin. Sun Bin, who had his legs cut off, fled to the state of Qi to be the military adviser of general Tian Ji. The king of Wei sent Pang Juan to attack Zhao. Tian Ji adopted Sun Bin's plan of encircling the Wei Dynasty to save Zhao and adding more troops, forcing Pang Juan to withdraw from the army and chase him to the ambush circle of Qi army in Maling road to commit suicide
Chinese PinYin : tiān bīng jiǎn zào
Add fuel to reduce fuel consumption
Leave the mountain to adjust the tiger. lí shān diào hǔ
Eight Immortals crossing the sea. bā xiān guò hǎi,gè xiǎn qí néng
cut off all means of retreat. pò fǔ chén zhōu
move about the country without definite employment. liú luò fēng chén