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Reward the army, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k à OSH à ngs à NJ à n, which means to reward and comfort the soldiers. From Shuoyue Quanzhuan.
Notes on Idioms
Reward: comfort and encouragement with property or food. Three armies: in the spring and Autumn period, it was called the central army, the left army and the right palace; later it was called the army. Now it refers to the army, navy and air force.
The origin of Idioms
In the 49th chapter of the complete biography of Shuoyue written by Qian Cai of Qing Dynasty, "the Ministry of household was ordered to issue grain and grass satins, the Ministry of Industry issued 300 jars of Royal Wine, the Ministry of rites was sealed, and his inner minister Tian Sizhong was sent to the army of YUEYE in Tanzhou to reward the three armies."
Idiom usage
As predicate or object, it refers to rewarding officers and soldiers. I went to a Chinese restaurant to have a meal of "chop suey" as a reward to the three armed forces. How do I write Lao Zhang's philosophy by Lao She
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know yourself as well as the enemy - zhī bǐ zhī jǐ
begin happily but end in failure - suǒ wěi liú lí
prance like the dragon and watch like the tiger - lóng xiāng hǔ xiào
there 's no making without breaking - bù può bù lì
a fellow who pursues rancidness - zhú chòu zhī fū