doom to death
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ì zh ī s ǐ D ì, which means to deliberately make people unable to survive. It's from nine places of Sun Tzu.
The origin of Idioms
"Nine places of Sun Tzu:" if you throw in the dead place, you will survive. If you sink in the dead place, you will live later. "
Idiom usage
It refers to harm. Example song Zizhen's Zhongshu Yelu Gong Shendao yuan Wukuai: "you and I should be careful. If we still find this man, we will die." Chapter 36 of Shi Yukun's "three heroes and five righteousness" in Qing Dynasty: "Feng tried his best to encourage Yan Sheng in front of Liu Hong.
Idiom story
During the Western Han Dynasty, Liu Bang sent his generals Han Xin and Zhang Er to attack the state of Zhao, and the king of Zhao, Liu Xie and General Chen Yu led 200000 troops to fight in jingxingkou. Chen Yu didn't listen to Li zuoche's advice, and fought hard with Han Xin. Han Xin deliberately put himself to death by the river. The soldiers fought against each other and fought bravely. Then they sent troops to capture Zhao's camp, kill Chen Yu and capture Liu Xie alive.
Chinese PinYin : zhì zhī sǐ dì
doom to death
unprecedented and unrepeatable. chāo qián jué hòu
A net of fish makes a net of fish. yú wǎng hóng lí
A collection of flies and ants. yíng jí yǐ fù