Fight and build a soldier
Fighting and casting soldiers, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ò u é RZH ù B ī ng, which means casting weapons in the face of war. It's a metaphor for not acting in time. The same as "fighting and casting a cone". It comes from Su Wen, the theory of four Qi regulating spirit.
The origin of Idioms
Su Wen · Si Qi Tiao Shen Da Lun: "husband's disease has become medicine, chaos has become medicine, for example, still eager to go through the well, fight and cast a cone, is it not too late?" One is "fighting to build soldiers".
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: fight to make a cone and dig a well in the face of thirst [antonym]: prepare for a rainy day
Idiom usage
To act as a predicate or attributive
Fight and build a soldier
My nose is flat and my lips are blue - bí tā chún qīng
lead a person to endless aftertastes - huí wèi wú qióng
have the same likes and dislikes - yì qì xiāng dé
low prices for grain hurt the peasants - gǔ jiàn shāng nóng
have the strong willpower that can make an arrow pierce even stone - shè shí yǐn yǔ