bury the hatchet
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ā oqi ā NgR ù K ù, which means there is no war, no armed; peace paralysis, disarmament, no alert. From Shuoyue Quanzhuan.
The origin of Idioms
Qian Cai's the complete biography of Shuoyue in Qing Dynasty: "at that time, the world had been peaceful for a long time. It was really that horses let go of Nanshan, guns and knives were put into storage, grain was plentiful, and people were happy to work."
Analysis of Idioms
Antonyms: peace in the world, peace in the country, peace in the people, peace in the family, peace in the river, peace in the sea, and peace in the country
Idiom usage
It is often used with "Ma Fang Nan Shan".
bury the hatchet
intertwined dragon -- talented men still remained in concealment - pán lóng wò hǔ
the few are no match for the many - sì bù niù liù