be defeated and flee
Escape from the wilderness is a Chinese idiom, pronounced Lu ò Hu ā ng é RT á o, which means to flee to the wilderness after losing a battle or leaving the battlefield or the main road. From Ma Ling Dao.
Analysis of Idioms
He is in a mess. [antonym] win a complete victory.
The origin of Idioms
The third fold of Yuan Wu Ming Shi's Ma Ling Dao: "since you slowly go up the road, I will go in a panic."
Idiom usage
It's more formal; it's a predicate; it's derogatory. In the romance of the Three Kingdoms written by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty, Xuande saw the banner of "general Di Gong", and the flying horse came, and Zhang Bao left They are not rivals at all, so they have to.
be defeated and flee
with one's face towards the sky - yǎng miàn cháo tiān
put one 's finger into another 's pie - duō guǎn xián shì
give rewards for good service and punishments for faults - shǎng gōng fá zuì