vanquish the enemy
Conquering the enemy is a Chinese idiom,
The Pinyin is: K è D í zh ì sh è ng,
Interpretation: subdue the enemy and win. It's from Sun Tzu's virtual reality.
Entry
vanquish the enemy
Pinyin
kèdízhìshèng
Citation explanation
Defeat the enemy and win. "Everyone knows why I win, but not why I win," says Sun Tzu Shi Naian's Water Margin Chapter 20: you can see the master's magic method only by conquering the enemy. It's the division of three parts. You don't have to give up. Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty Chapter 20 of outlaws of the marsh. Ming Wumingshi's "cutting down Jin and prospering Qi. The second fold": on the attack and encirclement, there is a firm way to defeat the enemy. Wang Fuzhi of the Qing Dynasty wrote in "on reading Tongjian · Tang suzong 11": "in terms of the merits of war, Li Guangbi regarded Guo as the most important one for his wisdom and bravery and for his success in conquering the enemy."
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: a surprise victory, a victory, a direct attack on the Yellow Dragon
Idiom usage
It is used in war and so on
vanquish the enemy
The clouds and the mist disperse - yún tún wù sàn
the writer 's sincerity shines through his words - qíng jiàn hū cí
A burning wife and a burning child - huǒ qī huī zǐ
The shadow of a son makes a wife - yìn zǐ fēng qī