a symbol of war in ancient china
Jinge Tiejia, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī ng ē Ti ě Ji ǎ, a metaphor for war. It also describes the majestic posture of soldiers galloping with guns. It's the same as "Jinge TieMa". From the marriage of two generations.
Analysis of Idioms
Jinge Tieqi, Jinge TieMa
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute to describe the war. In Qing Dynasty, Fang Wen's poem "Liu Xuanjiu gathers Wei Yuan's family tricks"
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Qiaoji's marriage of two generations, the third fold: "he is now in charge of the gold and iron armor, surrounded by the preaching of Mingjia. Although he is breaking the law, we have no power to cut the sword and copper."
a symbol of war in ancient china
in western dress and leather shoes - xī zhuāng gé lǚ
write well , fast and without need of revision - wén bù jiā diǎn
be able neither to cry nor to laugh - kū xiào bù dé