A mountain of accumulated armor
Jijia mountain, Pinyin J ī Ji ǎ R ú sh ā n, Chinese words, refers to the stack of soldiers and armor mountain. From Guan Shi Ling Tai Yan Bo Fu by Zhang Huiyan of Qing Dynasty
explain
[words] Ji Jia Ru Shan [Pinyin] J ī Ji ǎ R ú sh ā n [simplified spelling] jjrs [interpretation] soldier Jia stacked like a mountain
source
In Zhang Huiyan's Fu of Guanshi Lingtai Yanbo in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "when you are surrendered, you will accumulate like a mountain, while when you travel, you will listen to Kai."
Discrimination of words
[usage] as object and attributive; a large number of indexes [structure] complement [synonym] jijiashanqi [rhyme] yiguoduan, pengtuan Jiutian, flirting with adultery, sending Buddha to the West sky, holding hands to talk happily, moving with the flow of things, tiger body spot, dispelling private shame and greed, looking up at the sky, covering the ground all over the sky
A mountain of accumulated armor
the hill convulsed and the bell echoed - shān bēng zhōng yìng
as timid as a rat which peeps out its head and dares to do nothing - shǔ shǒu fèn shì
cravenly cling to life instead of braving death - tān shēng pà sǐ
Take the bull and ride the horse - fú niú chéng mǎ
Green forest and black fortress - qīng lín hēi sài