Strong food
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Qi ǎ ngsh í m í Ji ǎ o, which means to be full of food and strive to win. From Liezi Shuo Fu.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
The origin of Idioms
"Liezi Shuo Fu" says: "the winner is the winner, and it is also a beast." Yin Jingshun's explanation: "Han Shi waizhuan says:" it's all over the world. " "Lu's spring and Autumn Annals" says: "horn, try your strength." This is a saying that people value profit but despise Tao. They only have food. It's just like animals and animals fighting for victory when they are full of food. " In a word, it's called "Mo" when you read it all. It's called "Mo" when you read it all.
Idiom explanation
It's about having enough to fight.
Strong food
there is more what i want to say but cannot - shū bù jìn yán