Pinyin shn wúcún ti
There are no weapons around. "unarmed.
The idiom comes from Feng Ming and Meng Long's History of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (15): "When you lie in front of a strong man, you suddenly break out and cut them into pieces. Although there are followers, they are unarmed and die for a while. "
Simplified Chinese characters are unarmed
Commonly used degree is average
Sexy in color
Similar words are unarmed.
Idiom dictionary of Ministry of Education
ㄕㄣㄨㄘㄨㄣㄊㄧㄝˇ Athena Chu.
Pinyin shn wúcún ti
This idiom explains that Yi Shen is unarmed. See "unarmed".
Here are the idioms and allusions as the source of "unarmed" for your reference. Southern Song Dynasty. Liu's Other Gardens. Volume 10. Yang Feng and Zainan Township1> Mingxiang harvests millet 2> in the field. Because the tiger eats 3>, Xiangnian 14, it has no inch of blade, and it goes straight to the neck of the tiger, and the abundance is free. [Note] (1) Information: son. (2) harvesting millet: harvesting grain. (3) Bite: click, bite. ④ The sound ㄜ? is the same as "pinch". Hold on, hold on.
Here, the allusions are listed as "freehand" allusions for reference. The original book with bare hands is full of myths and legends, which records a story of Jin Dynasty: Yang Feng and his son Yang Xiang, who lived in Nanxiang, were bitten by a tiger while harvesting grain in the field. Yang Xiang, who was only fourteen years old, grabbed the tiger by the neck without any short and sharp weapons and saved his father's life. The blade is made of iron, so it later evolved into the idiom "unarmed" to describe not holding any weapons in your hand. In addition, in the earlier literature, Li Ling in the Han Dynasty wrote "Answering Su Wude": "The soldiers are tired, the people have no ruler and iron, and they still want to fight for the first place. You can already see the word "iron without feet", which means that the soldiers suffered heavy casualties, used up all their arrows and didn't even have a short weapon in their hands, so they bravely rushed forward to kill the enemy.
Synonymous idioms
Antisense idioms
Related Chinese idiom: unarmed. Interpretation of related Chinese characters: freehand