peerless or matchless bravery or valour
Bravery is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin y ǒ nggu à ns ā NJ ū n means bravery or bravery is the first in the army. It's from the book of Su Wu.
Idiom explanation
Crown: ranking first; three services: the general name of the armed forces. Bravery is the first in the army.
The origin of Idioms
Li Ling's reply to Su Wu Shu of the Han Dynasty: "the first general of the Ling Dynasty has achieved great success in the world, and his courage is the first of the three armies."
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as complement and object to describe people's bravery
Examples
General Patton was the bravest of the three armies, and he made many contributions to the Nazi war.
The book with Chen Bo written by Liang Qiuchi in the Southern Dynasty: only when the general is brave enough to lead the three armies can he emerge from the world. He abandons his ambition of sparrow and admires the Swan to soar!
In the 22nd chapter of the romance of the Three Kingdoms, Yuan Cao's three armed forces together captured the king Liu Er Jiang: Yan Liang and Wen Chou bravely led the three armed forces; the rest of the world's famous generals, such as Gao Lan, Zhang Ying and Chun Yu Qiong. ——What is Shao a useless person?
The 67th chapter of Shi Naian's Romance of the Three Kingdoms in Ming Dynasty: "if you are less slow, Zhuge Liang will be the prime minister in the Ming Dynasty, Guan and Zhang will be the generals in the three armies bravely, and the Shu people will be determined to defend the pass, so you can't commit it."
Liu Xianting's Guangyang miscellany in the Qing Dynasty: Wang Fu Chen is brave enough to lead the third army, and his direction is improper. His name is Ma Yaozi Eight princes to auxiliary Minister for shrimp, with into the capital.
Chinese PinYin : yǒng guàn sān jūn
peerless or matchless bravery or valour
the ornamental and the combined plain properties. wén zhì bīn bīn
political and military achievements. Wén zhì wǔ gōng
Comb the clouds and sweep the moon. shū yún lüě yuè