put soldiers on farm work
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is y ù B ī ngy ú n ó ng, which means to provide certain military training for farmers, farming in peacetime and fighting in wartime. Or refers to the army's reclamation. From the record after hearing and seeing.
Idiom explanation
Allegory: repose, contain.
The origin of Idioms
Shao Bo of the Song Dynasty, Volume I of the record after hearing and seeing: "it's a great expense for those who want to raise troops in this dynasty. If they want to restore the method of putting troops in agriculture, it's a scholar's opinion, which can be said but can't be used."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attribute; used in military affairs, etc.
put soldiers on farm work
the nest destroyed and the eggs broken - cháo huǐ luǎn pò
a square bottom with a round cover -- incompatible - fāng dǐ yuán gài
not ashamed to admit being the last - bù chǐ zuì hòu
a wind which chills to the bone - hán fēng qīn jī