carry all before one
It is a Chinese idiom, w ú Ji āù Nb ù Cu ī. It describes that the power is so strong that anything solid can be destroyed. It comes from the biography of Kong Chao in the old book of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the old book of the Tang Dynasty, the biography of Confucius' nest, it is said: "if you can see how to use it, you will be invincible."
Analysis of Idioms
Invincible and invincible
Idiom usage
His brave and arduous spirit fully demonstrates the tenacious vitality of the Communist movement and the invincible fighting power of the army led by the Communist Party. Liu Bocheng's review of the long march
Chinese PinYin : wú jiān bù cuī
carry all before one
divine troops descending from heaven. tiān bīng tiān jiàng
turn pale at the mention of a tiger. tán hǔ sè biàn
The river is falling and the moon is falling. hé qīng yuè luò
scheme exhausted and situation pressing. jì qióng shì cù
the statement of only one of the parties. yī miàn zhī cí