carry the world before one
The Chinese idiom, pronounced Su ǒ Xi à NGP ī m ǐ, means that wherever the power goes, all obstacles are swept away. This term is often used to describe a strong team that has no rival in military or sports. It comes from Xiang Yu's biography in historical records.
Analysis of Idioms
Invincible and indomitable
The origin of Idioms
Xiang Yu's biography in historical records: "so the king of Xiang rushed down, and the Han army was all conquered."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning. "So he and his friend xianbo and more than a hundred other people directly attacked the Qin formation and were invincible, killing countless Qin soldiers." (Chapter 46 of Eastern Zhou annals by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty) (2) Guo Xiaochuan's miners are not afraid of Ghosts: "we don't fight unprepared battles, so we will be invincible in every battle.". (3) in the biography of Xiao Que in the book of Liang Dynasty: "the battle of Zhongshan is really a hard battle, invincible, and the masses are afraid of it."
carry the world before one
get more than one bargained for - chī bù liǎo dōu zhe zǒu
patiently attend to a grave problem - jí mài huǎn jiù
weather-beaten leaves and flowers - cǎn lü chóu hóng
a dutiful son is obliged to pay his father 's debts - fù zhài zǐ huán