outmaneuver the enemy over glasses of wine
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh é ch ō ngz ū NZ ǔ, which means to win at the banquet of the alliance of the vassal states. After the general refers to diplomatic negotiations. It comes from the fifth chapter of Qi CE in the Warring States period.
Analysis of Idioms
A compromise
The origin of Idioms
Liu Xiang of the Western Han Dynasty wrote in the fifth chapter of Qi CE in the Warring States Period: "in the so-called Hall of comparison of this minister, the bird generals inside the house, pull out the city between the Zun Zu, and break into the seat."
Idiom usage
It's formal; it's predicate and attribute; it's commendatory. Finally, there is no other compensation for land cutting, which is his great contribution. (Chapter 6 of Nie Hai Hua)
outmaneuver the enemy over glasses of wine
so much that one cannot bear to part with it - ài bù shì shǒu
increase revenue and reduce expenditure - zēng shōu jié zhī