feign defeat
Feign defeat, idiom, as predicate, object, Pinyin: zh à B à iy á ngsh à, meaning pretending to be defeated, deceive people.
Entry
feign defeat
Pinyin
zhàbàiyángshū
Citation explanation
To pretend. Pretending to be defeated is tricky. In Yuan Dynasty, Gao Wenxiu's "Uncle fan", he pretended to be defeated, and he added to the army. At the foot of Maling mountain, he cut wood into a number, and all the crossbows were fired, killing the general Pang Juan Shi Naian, Ming Dynasty, the 85th chapter of outlaws of the Marsh: "Lin Chong and Hua Rong occupied the suspension bridge, went back to fight again, pretended defeat and lured Lu Junyi into the city. The three armed forces behind us are shouting in unison. In the city, Song Jiang and other generals mutinied together and took over the city. If you kill in all directions, everyone will tie his hands and return to his heart. " Chapter 119 of the outlaws of the marsh by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty. Two generals fight less than five, Guan Sheng also feigned defeat, back to the array. Chapter 25 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: "today, I can send Liu Bei's surrender soldiers into xiapi, and see Guan Gong. I only say that he fled back and fell in the city as an internal agent; but I lead Guan Gong to fight, feign defeat and lure him into other places." The 49th chapter of journey to the west by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty: "they pretended to be defeated, each dragged weapons, and went back."
Discrimination of words
Feint reading y á ng
Idiom usage
As a predicate or object
Chinese PinYin : zhà bài yáng shū
feign defeat
patch up a quarrel and reconcile the parties concerned. xī shì níng rén
parade with beautiful dress in broad daylight. yì jǐn zhòu yóu
When the water is clear, there is no fish. shuǐ zhì qīng wú yú
discard the dross and select the essential. qù cū qǔ jīng