heroic and combatworthy
One should be a hundred, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī y ǐ D ā NGB ǎ I, which means that one person is worth more than one hundred people, extremely brave. From flounder.
The origin of Idioms
The fourteenth chapter of flounder by Li Yu in Qing Dynasty: "Chu Yu led the whole army to kill the general. When the two are not relative, the real man is strong and strong. Kill those mountain bandits and run away with their heads in their arms. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. In Xia Xie's the chronicle of China and the west, the story of the martyrdom of Haijiang in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "if the foreign soldiers continue to advance again, our army will fight to the death. From Chen to Shen, they will not be able to eat or drink, and they will fight to the death."
heroic and combatworthy
do not hurt the important essentials - wú shāng dà tǐ
fearless of death for a just cause - dà yì lǐn rán
proceed like a school of fishes , one after the other - yú guàn yàn xíng