be more brave than wise
Brave but not resourceful, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǒ uy ǒ NGW ú m ó u, meaning only courage, no strategy. It describes that doing things or fighting is just a rush, lack of planning, no strategy, only rash to do things, never opportunistic. It comes from the statement of interests of the two rivers and the west of Huaihe River written by Lu Zhi of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Only courage, no strategy
The origin of Idioms
Lu Zhi of the Tang Dynasty wrote "on the interests of the two rivers and the west of the Huaihe River": "(Wang) Wu junfan, brave but not resourceful."
Discrimination of words
The synonym courage without strategy, courage of every man the antonym courage with strategy, great wisdom and courage, both wisdom and courage, both civil and military
Idiom usage
The new born calf is not afraid of the tiger; the overlord of Western Chu conquers the world (especially Xiang Yu)
Chinese PinYin : yǒu yǒng wú móu
be more brave than wise
pay no attention to small matters. bù jīn xì xíng
tough and strong as iron and steel. tóng jīn tiě lèi
to pick the good and select the capable for public posts. xuǎn xián yǔ néng