Grasp the clouds and grasp the mist
Grasping the clouds and holding the fog, a Chinese idiom, pronounced w ò y ú NN á w ù, means to control the clouds and fog, which means to be good at mastering military equipment. It comes from Chen Yiren's fighting tiger with filial piety in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The first discount of Chen Yiren's "save filial piety and fight the tiger" in Yuan Dynasty: "it's hard for you to compete with the dragon and the tiger. You should grasp the clouds and take the fog to implement the strategy of fighting, and make the arrangement of troops more wonderful."
Analysis of Idioms
Holding the fog and holding the cloud
Usage: used as predicate and attribute; used in writing
Grasp the clouds and grasp the mist
Compare the green with the white - qǔ qīng pì bái
work very hard regardless of weather - mù yǔ zhì fēng
Lick the skin and discuss the bone - shì pí lùn gǔ