The eight-character idiom is invincible

Every attack is invincible and all battles are invincible

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An all-attack is invincible and all battles are invincible,

Pinyin gōng wú bù kèzhàn wú bù shèng,

From "Warring States Policy·Qin Ceyi".

Chinese name

Invincible, invincible

Pronunciation

gōng wú bù kèzhàn wú bù shèng

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"Warring States Policy·Qin Ceyi"

Interpretation

When attacking a city, there is nothing that cannot be captured

Words All attacks are invincible, all battles are invincible

Pronunciation: gōng wú bù kè, zhàn wú bù shèng

Definition: attack: attack; g: conquer. When attacking a city, there is no city that cannot be captured; in fighting, there is no battle that cannot be won. [1]

From "Warring States Policy·Qin Policy 1" by Liu Xiang of the Western Han Dynasty: "It is known that the Qin war was not invincible, the attack was not insurmountable, and the task was not invincible."

Example: This army is said to be ~'s heavenly general and magic weapon. (Selected from Wu Qiang's "Red Sun")

Explanation: It describes the army as being powerful and victorious in every battle. Or a metaphor for success in anything you do.