skiied at shooting an arrow
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ì ngxi á n é Rd ǎ o, meaning to fall with the sound of bowstring. It describes the skill of archery. From the biography of General Li in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
The biography of General Li in historical records: "when he shoots, he sees that the enemy is in a hurry. He doesn't shoot within dozens of steps. If he doesn't hit the target, he will fall in line."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. Old book of the Tang Dynasty biography of Li daoxuan: he went to the thief from Taizong, then came in and out again, flying arrow disorderly down, arrow like hedgehog hair, fierce Qi, shooting people all fell in response. The fierce beast stands out, and the emperor orders the king to shoot it. Biography of Yang Ji in the book of Jin
skiied at shooting an arrow
endure great hardships in pioneer work - bì lù lán lǚ
decision making through operations research - yùn chóu huà cè
Things seldom seen are strange. - liáo dōng bái shǐ