A wave of arms
It is a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is Hu à NJI à Hu à g à, which means wearing armor and holding weapons. It is used to describe fully armed, brave and indomitable. It is also called "fighting with armor" and "fighting with armor". From Zuo Zhuan, the second year of Chenggong.
Idiom explanation
擐: put it on. Armor: armor. Gore: weapons.
The origin of Idioms
In the second year of Chenggong, Zuo Zhuan, written by Zuo Qiuming in the spring and Autumn period, it is said that "if you are a soldier, you will die."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in war, etc. Example: Fu yongzhuan in the book of Wei states: "in order to fight, only Cai Sanhu, the leader of the army, was the first to enter, and no one else could."
A wave of arms
riddled with a thousand wounds - bǎi kǒng qiān chuāng
strike out a new line for oneself - zì chū yī jiā
people bustling and horses neighing - rén huān mǎ jiào
do one 's work in a careless manner - cǎo shuài cóng shì
strong enough to pull up mountains and raise tripods - bá shān jǔ dǐng