We are invincible, and we can win every attack
"Invincible" is a Chinese idiom pronounced "zh à NW ú B à sh è ng, G à NGW ú B à Q à", or a metaphor for success in anything.
Idiom explanation
The army is powerful and victorious.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: in the language version of the Warring States strategy Qin CE 2, it is said that "we know that Qin's war has never been invincible, that we have never failed to attack, that we have never failed to break." Take an example to make a sentence: Cao said that song said: "I think the rats in the world are just like grass and mustard ears. Everywhere, the army is invincible, and all attacks are taken. Those who follow me live, and those who rebel against me die. Do you know? " The 60th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty
Discrimination of words
Phonetic code: zwbq synonym: war will win, attack will take usage: used as predicate and attribute; used in written language
We are invincible, and we can win every attack
have an affectionate concern for each other - sòng nuǎn tōu hán
A grain of rice is a bundle of wages - lì mǐ shù xīn