successive distresses as caused by continual wars
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ī ngli á nhu ò Ji é, which means that wars have brought endless disasters. It comes from the biography of Xiongnu in the history of Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Soldier: War; company: connection; knot: connection.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Xiongnu in the history of Han Dynasty, "although he has made great achievements in conquering the enemy, Hu often reported it, and the war has been in a series of troubles for more than 30 years."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attributive, clause; used in protracted war. Liu Ji of the Ming Dynasty: a series of wars and calamities, destroying the common people, wasting the country, and regretting too late. biography of ban Liang in the book of the later Han Dynasty: if you want to contribute to the famine, you can never achieve anything. If you have a series of wars and disasters, you can't regret it. In the first biography of Guangxi chieftains in the history of the Ming Dynasty, it is said that "[Zhuman] and when he heard of the appeasement, he cheated Xiang Shun, but still plundered wantonly, because of the combination of war and disaster, he had no peace." "But since the incident in Wuhan, all provinces have responded to it, and there have been a series of wars and disasters, which have been devastated."
successive distresses as caused by continual wars
numerous tasks remain to be undertaken - bǎi duān dài jǔ