At the end of a bolt
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Qi á NGN ǔ m ò sh ǐ, which means that the powerful force has been weakened and can not play any role. The same as "the end of a strong crossbow". It comes from the biography of Li mi in the old book of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
This is a metaphor for the fact that the powerful force has weakened and has no effect. The same as "the end of a strong crossbow".
The origin of Idioms
"Li mi Zhuan, an old book of the Tang Dynasty," says: "it's a strong arrow at the end of the arrow, and it's not reasonable to wear it on Lu Yi; it's strong in the wind, and it's strong in Hong Mao."
Analysis of Idioms
The end of a strong crossbow, the end of a strong crossbow
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute
At the end of a bolt
Call in the morning and call in the evening - zhāo zòu mù zhào
which is right and which is wrong - shuí shì shuí fēi