pursue and attack
Chasing the north, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zhu ī w á ngzh ú B ě I, meaning to pursue the defeated enemy. It comes from Han Jiayi's on crossing the Qin Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Han Jiayi's on crossing the Qin Dynasty: "chasing the subjugated and chasing the north, one million corpses."
Idiom usage
To pursue a defeated enemy. example as a result of driving away, he went to Jiashi and gained more than 10000 yuan. According to Chen Shou's biography of Lu Xun in the annals of the Three Kingdoms and the biography of Tiandan in the historical records, the Yan army ran in disorder, and the Qi people pursued the subjugation and the north In the chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, Wu Zhi and Lu Xun Zhuan, it is said that "the three roads advance together. GuoChong stops ambushing troops. Because of driving them away, he pursues the subjugation and chases the north. He goes to Jiashi and gains more than 10000 yuan." It is also called "chasing the dead and running away" and "chasing the north". "Guan Zi · art of War:" the weapon becomes a teaching method, chasing after the dead and running away is like the wind, stabbing is like thunder and lightning. "
pursue and attack
give up literature for a military career - qì bǐ cóng róng
unable to distinguish black from white - bù fēn qīng béi
On the mountain, too busy - shān yīn dào shàng,yìng jiē bù xiá
Mend the scales and nourish the claws - xiū lín yǎng zhǎo
Licking carbuncle and sucking hemorrhoid - shì yōng shǔn zhì