One shot to the top
One shot to the top, idiom, interpretation: it refers to one success at a time. Buttress: a target made of earth. The first arrow hit the buttress. It's a metaphor to say and do things once. From back: "he saw you can sing Nanqu, Guanqing an arrow on the pile, leaving you to do a pro with the officer." The seventh chapter of Jin Ping Mei CI Hua
Discrimination of words
words whose meaning is similar
In one shot
Grammatical usage
It is used as predicate and attributive
The origin of Idioms
The second discount of Fu Jin Ding by Wu Ming Shi in Yuan Dynasty: "it doesn't matter. I'll go now and hit the pile with one stone."
Idiom explanation
Buttress: a target made of earth. The first arrow hit the buttress. It's a metaphor to say and do things once.
Chinese PinYin : yī jiàn shàng duò
One shot to the top
If there is no tiger in the mountain, the monkey is king. shān shàng wú lǎo hǔ,hóu zǐ chēng dà wáng