fierce struggle between two evenly-matched opponents
Dragon fighting tiger is an idiom with the pronunciation h ǔ D ò UL ó ngzh ē ng, which describes the fierce struggle or competition. It comes from Han Ban Gu's Dabin opera.
explain
Describes a struggle or competition as intense
source
Ban Gu's Dabin opera in Han Dynasty: "divide the Xia, fight for the dragon and the tiger." The fourth fold of Yuan Jin Renjie's chasing Hanxin: "it's not like this battle to stop boasting that Jie and Zhou took up swords and soldiers, and to say that Wu and Yue annexed each other."
usage
It refers to the fighting among the heroes
Examples
I don't believe you dare to row empress dowager Lu. In vain, the Dragon fights the tiger. It's all my friends. (the second part of Han Gong Qiu by Ma Zhiyuan in Yuan Dynasty) Xingyuan in Guilin, a Dream Tour in the sky; ~, another battle. The 42nd chapter of scholars by Wu Jingzi in Qing Dynasty
fierce struggle between two evenly-matched opponents
the law does not protect the powerful persons - fǎ bù ē guì
make proper use of resources and enrich the lives of the people - lì yòng hòu shēng
have a good idea of how things stand - xiōng zhōng yǒu shù
to eat in different ways -- different ways of aggression - jīng tūn cán shí
be snatched from the jaws of death - jué chù féng shēng