war-torn
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ī NGG ē R ǎ or ǎ ng, which means to describe the turbulence and chaos of social order during the war. It comes from the biography of Feng Yan in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
War: weapons, war; disturbance: chaos.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Feng Yan in the book of the later Han Dynasty, "when we are disturbed, we are at the time of military revolution."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; attributive; derogatory. Example: the old mother saw that she killed her son and robbed her daughter in the war, which spoiled Zaisu. Ling Mengchu, Ming Dynasty, Volume 22
war-torn
See not take, think of thousands of miles - jiàn zhī bù qǔ,sī zhī qiān lǐ
the gold of the south and the arrow of the east -- a good talent - nán jīn dōng jiàn