Never come back
In Chinese, the Pinyin is zh ī L ú Nb ù f ǎ n, which means that not even one wheel of the chariot can return. It comes from the biography of Gongyang, the 33rd year of Duke Fu.
Idiom explanation
Only: one. Not even one wheel of the chariot returned. It's a metaphor for the annihilation of the whole army.
The origin of Idioms
In the 33rd year of the Duke of Fu in the biography of Gongyang, "however, the people of Jin Dynasty and Jiang Rong fought against each other for the best food, and the horses did not turn back."
Chinese PinYin : zhī lún bù fǎn
Never come back
The dragon's war and the fish's horror. lóng zhàn yú hài
bamboo fences and hay-thatched mud cottages. zhú lí máo shè