divine troops descending from heaven
Tianbing Tianjiang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ti ā Nb ī ngTi ā NJI à ng, which means the old army, generals and immortal Corps in the sky. It also refers to people with high ability. It comes from Mupi Sanren Guci · prologue.
Idiom explanation
It used to refer to the troops and generals in the sky. It's also a metaphor for people with high skills.
The origin of Idioms
In the opening of Mupi Sanren Guci written by Jia Fuxi in the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "the son born by that man, who has great powers, subdues the tiger and subdues the dragon, and his heavenly soldiers and generals."
Idiom usage
As subject, object, attribute; of magic power
Examples
And how to invite the heavenly army and general to catch wuzhiqi, the monster making waves. New stories by Lu Xun
divine troops descending from heaven
a book that is shut is but a block - kāi juàn yǒu yì
sit idle and eat , and in time one 's whole fortune will be used up - zuò chī shān bēng
each trying to cheat or outwit the other - ěr yú wǒ zhà
prick one 's own thigh with a needle to keep himself awake - yǐn zhuī cì gǔ
The former planted trees, the latter enjoyed the cool - qián rén zhòng shù,hòu rén chéng liáng
have never been heard from since - miǎo wú yīn xìn