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It's an afterword, and metaphors can easily destroy an enemy or something.
The Chinese idiom cuī kū lā xiǔ means to destroy the decaying grass and trees. It's easy to describe. It is also a metaphor for the powerful momentum of destroying the corrupt forces.
From: "Jin Shu Gan Zhuo Biography": "The general's move is Wuchang."
If it is destroyed, it will wither and decay".
Translation: The general's capture of Wuchang is as easy as destroying the withered and decaying.
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This is a post-break phrase that means "to destroy and decay" in the end.
The metaphor can easily destroy an enemy or something. Withered: Withered grass. Pull: Break. Decay: Rotting wood.
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withering, paraphrasing: destroying: destroying; Dry:
Subtilis; Pull: Break. Decayed: Rotten wood.
It is a metaphor for the decaying forces or things that can be easily destroyed. The original work "Destroy and Rot". Source:
The Biography of Geng Yi in the Book of the Later Han Dynasty: "Returning to the sudden cavalry, with a rabble, such as destroying the withered and rotten ears. "The Book of Jin Ganzhuo Biography":
The general's move to Wuchang will be devastated. ”
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Easy to use, that is, the old man eats beans, and the old cow eats tender grass. 100% Zodiac Ox.