die in battle
Blood stained battlefield, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xu è R ǎ NSH ā ch ǎ ng, which means blood stained battlefield. Sacrifice on the battlefield. It comes from the second volume of the romance of the general of the Yang family by Wu Mingshi of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the romance of the Yang family generals by Wu Mingshi of the Ming Dynasty, Volume 2: "it's too early for us to have a bloody battle if we don't come here today."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
[example]
Dong Biwu's "Handan martyrs tower" said: "blood on the battlefield is a rainbow. It is a hero to die for the country."
Chinese PinYin : xuè rǎn shā chǎng
die in battle
show oneself in one's true colors. yuán xíng bì lù
spread out and scatter about like stars in the sky or chessman on the chessboard. qí bù xīng luó
be crafty and far from upright. jué ér bù zhèng
universe of 1000000000 universes. dà qiān shì jiè
never to slacken morning or night. sù yè fěi xiè