be invincible all before one
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su à Xi à NGW ú Qi á n, which means the place where the army points without any obstruction. From the book of Wei.
The origin of Idioms
Pei Songzhi's annotation of the biography of Xianbei in the annals of the Three Kingdoms and Wei annals quoted the book of Wei as follows: in the fourteenth five year plan of the year, bu Benyi, a member of a different tribe, took his cattle and sheep from other families, and pursued them by Tan Shi and Huai CE Qi.
Idiom story
In 211 ad, after Cao Cao unified the north, he led his army to the west, defeated Han Sui and Ma Chao, occupied Chang'an, and ordered Xia Houyuan to attack Longyou. Song Jian stood by Lueyang and waited for XiaHouYuan to attack, but was driven to Wuhan by XiaHouYuan. Cao Cao praised Xia Houyuan for attacking Longyou, saying that there was nothing in front of him to stop.
Idiom usage
No one can resist it. example a brave and sharp charge means that the journey is never forward. Hong Sheng's the palace of eternal life
Analysis of Idioms
[similar words] invincible [opposite words] repeatedly defeated [same rhyme words] full of doubts, broken walls, seeking the source, awe inspiring, apathetic, drowning, worthy of reputation, enduring frost and cold, broken jade and fragmentary fragrance
be invincible all before one
help and encourage the younger generation - yòu yè hòu jìn
not a hair 's breadth in between - jiàn bù róng fà