A soldier in accordance with the law
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is à NJI ǎ Q ǐ Nb ī ng, which means stopping military operations. It comes from Fu Gan, the spring and Autumn Annals of Jiuzhou, written by Sima Biao of Jin Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Fu Gan, the spring and Autumn Annals of Jiuzhou, written by Sima Biao of Jin Dynasty: "Wu has the danger of the Yangtze River, Shu has the resistance of Chongshan. It is difficult to be awed, but it is easy to be virtuous. He thought that he could lay down his troops according to the rules of the first class, rest his troops and support his scholars, set up the land for enfeoffment, and reward his merits. "
Idiom usage
United; predicate; truce
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: stop
A soldier in accordance with the law
be toughened and hardened into steel - bǎi liàn chéng gāng
bend one 's body and exhaust one 's energy - jū gōng jìn cuì