a lonely horseman
It's a Chinese idiom. Its pronunciation is p ǐ m ǎ D ā nqi ā ng, which means to fight alone. It means acting alone without help. From Wujiang.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: single horse; antonym: many people, many people
The origin of Idioms
Wu Jiang, a poem written by Wang Zun of Chu Dynasty in the Five Dynasties, said: "the soldiers scattered their bows, and the tiger's might was defeated, and each horse broke through the siege with a single shot." In the Song Dynasty, Shi Daoyuan's biography of lanterns in Jingde, a monk in Ruzhou South courtyard: "how about a single shot? The teacher said, "treat me with a stick. '”
Idiom usage
In Nie Gannu's on the crow, it is said that "when a man was young and strong, when he was young and strong, in today's society, as long as he was not deaf or dumb, he had no ambition."
a lonely horseman
Promote the clean and strict customs - yáng qīng lì sú
Good deeds and good punishments - jìn shàn chéng jiān
The dike of a thousand miles is broken in the ant nest - qiān lǐ zhī dī,kuì yú yǐ xuè
Birds in terror and mice in flight - niǎo hài shǔ cuàn
daily necessities as food and clothing - bù bó shū sù