One shot at both
The idiom, as object and attribute, can kill two birds with one stone. It means doing one thing to achieve two goals. It comes from Chen Tianhua's "lion roar" in Qing Dynasty: "a hero has his own hero's face. If he is afraid of taking over the task, he will be able to kill both at the same time." Press, this refers to the anti foreign anti Qing, the two go hand in hand, kill two birds with one stone.
Idioms and allusions
In the lion roar written by Chen Tianhua of the Qing Dynasty, the wedge says: "a hero has his own face. He is afraid of taking over the task, and he will be able to kill both at the same time." Press, this refers to the anti foreign anti Qing, the two go hand in hand, kill two birds with one stone.
Word usage
Usage: used as object and attribute; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : yī shǐ shuāng chuān
One shot at both
have no appreciation of a thing 's importance. bù shí gāo dī