blood flowing like stream
The Chinese idiom, Li ú Xu è Qi ā NL ǐ, means that there are many casualties in the war. It comes from the Western Han Dynasty's Liu Xiang's "Warring States strategy · Wei strategy".
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive, it can be used as an example of war disaster, etc. Therefore, it is said that those who hide it in China are now bleeding away.
The origin of Idioms
In the Western Han Dynasty, Liu Xiang's "Warring States strategy · Wei CE" said: "the anger of the son of heaven is a million corpses and a thousand li of blood."
Idiom explanation
It describes the scene of many casualties in the war.
blood flowing like stream
allow oneself to be insulted to remain alive - rěn gòu tōu shēng
The power of nine oxen and two tigers - jiǔ niú èr hǔ zhī lì
worry about troubles of one 's own imagining - yōng rén zì rǎo
open broad avenues to able people - guǎng kāi cái lù
Soldiers come to meet generals, water comes to earth weirs - bīng lái jiàng yíng,shuǐ lái tǔ yàn