exactly equal in weight
Zhu Liangxi is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is zh ū Li ǎ NGX ī ch è n, which means that the two are equal in weight. It's from the pseudo freedom book: two kinds of incomprehensibility.
Analysis of Idioms
The opposite is different from each other
The origin of Idioms
If you want to preserve the above, you should change the last two sentences to "the police force is empty, and the villagers are retreating." this is a full name, and has nothing to do with the military and police. (Lu Xun's two kinds of pseudo Free Books)
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning. In Wang Yingkui's essays on Liunan, Volume 2, it is said that "the rhyme and poetry are antithetical, and both of them are well known. However, we must look at the above sentence, so that people can't think of the next sentence, and then we can see the unexpected changes."
exactly equal in weight
both intelligent and courageous - zhì yǒng shuāng quán
Pay equal attention to words and ears - kǒu ěr bìng zhòng
a pleasure which would cost one nothing - huì ér bù fèi
East wind overwhelms west wind - dōng fēng yā dǎo xī fēng
The sound of flies and the sound of frogs - yíng shēng wā zào