invincible
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ti à nxi à m à D í, which means to describe invincible, no rival. It comes from the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Wei annals and Wudi Ji.
Idiom explanation
Describe invincible, no opponent. The same as "invincible".
The origin of Idioms
Chen Shou of the Jin Dynasty wrote in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, the annals of the Wei Dynasty and the annals of Emperor Wu: "in 50 years, the Duke broke Shao, and the world was invincible."
Idiom usage
There is no match in the world.
Examples
Feng Menglong in Ming Dynasty and Cai Yuanfang in Qing Dynasty, the 75th chapter of the chronicles of the states in the Eastern Zhou Dynasty: "although this man is a military commander, he is invincible in the world. What about Chu?"
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Invincible
invincible
as easy as burning hair and crushing dry weeds - liǎo fà cuī kū
follow or obey with sincere willingness - shū xīn fú yì
with engeaved dragons and phoenix - diāo lóng huà fèng