Thin flesh and thin bones
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is R ò UB ó g ǔ B ì ng, which means that meat and meat are forced, and bone and bone are united. Describes the intensity of the battle. It comes from the biography of Hao in the history of the Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Hao jingzhuan in the history of the Yuan Dynasty, "if the flesh and bones are pulled out together, they will break through the walls and leave the city alone."
Idiom usage
To describe the intensity of a battle
Thin flesh and thin bones
excelling and deep ---- to be transcendent without trace - chāo chāo xuán zhù
nice young lady is like beautiful peach and plum blossoms - yāo táo nóng lǐ
Learning is like penetrating a well - xué rú chuān jǐng
phoenix coronet and robes of rank - fèng guān xiá pèi