Go out and be a general
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ū R ù Ji ā ngxi ā ng, which means to be a prime minister. It comes from Song Ouyang Xiu's Xiangzhou Jintang.
Idiom explanation
The first word is a general, and the second word is a general.
Idioms and allusions
Ouyang Xiu's "Xiangzhou Jintang Ji" in Song Dynasty: "so he was able to be a general and industrious Wang family." Therefore, he was able to be a general and industrious He has been an official for over 90 years. Shao Bowen's Wen Jian Qian Lu (Volume 8)
Discrimination of words
It is used as predicate and attributive; it refers to both civil and military, and the official position is high
Go out and be a general
Water to hand, food to mouth - shuǐ lái shēn shǒu,fàn lái zhāng kǒu
cut the bones between the joints and make use of the momentum to decompose the boneless parts - pī xì dǎo kuǎn
leave a name that will stink to eternity - yí chòu wàn nián