Jiejiaxiushi
Jiejiaxiushi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ě Ji ǎ Xi ū sh ì, which means to take off the armor and let the soldiers rest. The metaphor is no longer fighting. It comes from the inscription of Huashan hall in Xiyue.
explain
Take off the armor and let the soldiers rest. The metaphor is no longer fighting.
source
According to the inscription of Huashan Tang Que in the west mountain, "the contribution of Xiao Xiang in the past, after the contribution of Xiao Xiang was crowned, the contribution of Fu Yi Jia also came into being. So he dismissed his superior and did not fight. " It is also called "a truce". Yu Xin of the Northern Zhou Dynasty wrote "the monument to the God of Murong, the governor of the state of Chu in the state of Zhou Zhu": "after the Yiling mausoleum was burned, the Chinese side in Guizhou decided to turn the army around and fight against it
Chinese PinYin : jiě jiǎ xiū shì
Jiejiaxiushi
anxious to display one's skill.. jiàn liè xīn xǐ
feed a tiger to one 's own detriment. yǎng hǔ yí huàn
Follow the flow and forget the rebellion. cóng liú wàng fǎn
poor in talent but very ambitious. kōng fù gāo xīn
shut one 's door and reflect on one 's misdeeds. bì gé sī guò