slight military loss
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is w á ngsh ǐ y í Z ú, which means the arrow of loss and the arrow of loss. It refers to slight military loss. It comes from Guo Qin Lun.
The origin of Idioms
Jia Yi of Han Dynasty wrote in the treatise on passing through Qin Dynasty: "Qin has no expense to die, but the princes of the world are already trapped."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. In Xia Xie's a chronicle of China and the west, the story of the martyrdom of Haijiang in the Qing Dynasty: "if the soldiers do not fight, the city gate is not closed, and the enemy does not have to pay for it, then Ningbo will be the same as Shanghai."
Chinese PinYin : wáng shǐ yí zú
slight military loss
close and intimate friendship. jīn shí zhì jiāo
embarrassed by undeserved praise. kuì bù gǎn dāng