Strategy

12 Chinese Idioms About War & Battle

Fierce Chinese idioms from ancient battlefields about military strategy, warfare, and the art of winning.

China's long military history produced brilliant strategic thinking that remains relevant today. These battle-tested idioms teach tactics, leadership, and the art of winning.

1

百折不挠

bǎi zhé bù náo

Unshakeable despite adversity

Literal meaning: Bend hundred times never yield

Dating to the Warring States period, this idiom describes bamboo that bends a hundred (百) times (折) but never (不) yields (挠). The imagery comes from ancient observations of bamboo groves surviving severe storms by bending rather than breaking. The metaphor gained particular significance during the T...

Example

Despite numerous rejections, she never gave up on her dreams

尽管屡次被拒绝,她从未放弃梦想

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2

破釜沉舟

pò fǔ chén zhōu

Commit with no retreat

Literal meaning: Break pots sink boats

Originating from a famous historical event in 207 BCE, this idiom recounts how general Xiang Yu ordered his troops to break (破) their cooking pots (釜) and sink (沉) their boats (舟) before battling the Qin army. By eliminating the possibility of retreat, he created absolute commitment to victory. Duri...

Example

He quit his job to start a business, fully committed to success

他辞去工作创业,全身心投入追求成功

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3

逆水行舟

nì shuǐ xíng zhōu

Progress needs constant effort

Literal meaning: Boat moving against current

This idiom describes a boat (舟) moving (行) against (逆) the current (水), originally appearing in Tang Dynasty texts discussing persistence in difficult endeavors. The metaphor draws from the experience of river traders who understood that stopping meant drifting backward. During the Song Dynasty, it ...

Example

In this competitive industry, you must keep improving or fall behind

在这个竞争激烈的行业,你必须不断进步,否则就会落后

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4

狐假虎威

hú jiǎ hǔ wēi

Borrow authority to intimidate

Literal meaning: Fox uses tiger's power

This idiom emerged from a Warring States period fable where a fox (狐) borrowed (假) the authority (威) of a tiger (虎) to intimidate other animals. The story first appeared in the Zhan Guo Ce, using the clever fox and powerful tiger to criticize political parasites who derived their influence from powe...

Example

The junior manager kept dropping the CEO's name to get his way

这个初级经理总是搬出CEO的名字来达到目的

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5

运筹帷幄

yùn chóu wéi wò

Plan strategy carefully

Literal meaning: Plan behind curtain

Rooted in military strategy, this idiom describes making crucial decisions behind the curtains (帷幄) of a military command tent while planning (运筹) campaigns. It gained prominence through records of Liu Bang, founder of the Han Dynasty, who was praised for his strategic planning abilities within his ...

Example

The CEO quietly developed the company's expansion strategy

首席执行官在幕后静静地制定公司的扩张战略

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6

深谋远虑

shēn móu yuǎn lǜ

Plan far ahead

Literal meaning: Deep plan far thought

Combining deep (深) planning (谋) with far-reaching (远) consideration (虑), this idiom emerged from Western Han political philosophy. It appeared in historical accounts praising strategists who could anticipate complex consequences of their actions. The phrase gained prominence during the Three Kingdom...

Example

The policy makers considered implications decades into the future

政策制定者考虑了几十年后的影响

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7

三人成虎

sān rén chéng hǔ

Repeated lie becomes truth

Literal meaning: Three people make tiger real

This idiom originates from the Wei state minister Pang Cong's warning to his king about how three (三) people's (人) repeated lies can make even an absurd claim - like a tiger (虎) loose in the marketplace - seem true (成). The story, recorded in Warring States texts, demonstrates how repeated rumors ca...

Example

The untrue rumor about a product defect spread on social media until customers started believing it without evidence

关于产品缺陷的不实传言在社交媒体上传播,直到顾客开始在没有证据的情况下相信它

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8

步步为营

bù bù wéi yíng

Advance methodically with caution

Literal meaning: Each step make camp

This strategic approach emerged from Han Dynasty military manuals, describing armies that established (为) a secure camp (营) with each step (步步) of their advance. The tactic gained fame during the Three Kingdoms period when general Cao Cao used it to campaign through difficult terrain. Unlike rapid d...

Example

The company expanded cautiously, securing each market before moving to the next

公司谨慎扩张,在进军下一个市场前先稳固每一个市场

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9

暗度陈仓

àn dù chén cāng

Achieve secretly through misdirection

Literal meaning: Secretly cross Chencang

This strategic idiom refers to secretly (暗) crossing/passing (度) through Chencang (陈仓), originating from Han Xin's famous military maneuver during the Chu-Han contention (206-202 BCE). Historical records describe how Han Xin pretended to repair roads in one location while secretly moving troops thro...

Example

The company quietly developed the technology while competitors focused elsewhere

当竞争对手将注意力集中在其他地方时,该公司悄悄地开发了这项技术

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10

鹬蚌相争

yù bàng xiāng zhēng

Mutual conflict benefits third party

Literal meaning: Snipe clam mutual fight

This cautionary tale depicts a snipe (鹬) and clam (蚌) in mutual (相) combat (争), originating from the 'Strategies of the Warring States' around 300 BCE. During the Han Dynasty, political advisors frequently cited it to warn rulers about the dangers of becoming obsessed with immediate opponents while ...

Example

While the two companies were locked in legal battles, a third competitor captured their market share

当这两家公司陷入法律战时,第三个竞争对手占领了他们的市场份额

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11

针锋相对

zhēn fēng xiāng duì

Sharp, direct confrontation in argument

Literal meaning: Needle points facing each other

Military tacticians of the Southern and Northern Dynasties first used this image of needle points (针锋) directly facing each other (相对) to describe precise tactical confrontation. Tang Dynasty literary critics adopted it for scholarly debates, appreciating how it captured the essence of pointed intel...

Example

During the debate, each candidate responded with immediate sharp counterarguments

辩论中,每位候选人都以即时尖锐的反驳作为回应

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12

按图索骥

àn tú suǒ jì

Rigidly following outdated methods

Literal meaning: Follow map seek fine horse

This idiom originated from the 'Han Feizi' text of the Warring States period, telling of a man seeking an exceptional steed named Ji using only an old drawing, failing because the living horse had changed. During the Tang Dynasty, it became shorthand for rigid methodology ignoring changed realities....

Example

The investors relied on outdated market research to find opportunities in the rapidly evolving technology sector

投资者依靠过时的市场研究在快速发展的技术领域寻找机会

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