complete failure
The Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Qu á NJ ū NF ù mi è, which means that the whole army has been destroyed. It means that everything has failed or died. From the romance of Fengshen.
The origin of Idioms
The ninety third chapter of the romance of the gods by Xu Zhonglin of Ming Dynasty: "the seven monsters of Meishan turned into human figures and fought with Zhou soldiers repeatedly. All of them were killed one after another and reappeared to their original form. They lost the dignity of the imperial court and the whole army was destroyed. The officials had to flee back."
Idiom usage
A complete failure. Example: biography of Li Xilei in the old book of Tang Dynasty: "all the officers and soldiers were defeated by him, and Zhang Boyi, the Jiedu envoy of Jingnan, was completely annihilated." Its future is bound to be that the whole army will be destroyed. The Chiang Kai Shek government is surrounded by the whole people
complete failure
help at the loss of one 's life - liǎng lèi chā dāo
be neither extravagant nor thrifty - bù fēng bù jiǎn
The sound of the tide is sincere - cháo míng diàn chè
one does not do what one has learned - xué fēi suǒ yòng