Armed, Chinese vocabulary. Pinyin: wǔ zhuāng means: 1, armed with military weapons, 2, armed with military weapons and other equipment.
Interpretation by reference:
1. Military uniform.
Ming? Chen Zilong? The poem "Lugan Shandong" says: "Tell the temple to honor the military ceremony and welcome the three armies of Su Xuan." "Red Ballad Collection December Song": "Don't worry, you can't go back unarmed." ? Mao Zedong? The poem "Inscription for Female Militia" wrote: "China children are so curious, they don't like red clothes and love armed forces."
2. Military equipment.
Qing? Qiu Jin? Bao Daoge: "I swear to come back from the dead, and peace in the world depends on the three armies."
3. Use weapons and equipment.
Qu Qiubai? "Hungry Hometown Trip" X: "Overseas Chinese communities have always been able to organize their own patrol teams and other commercial groups to arm themselves against Red Beard."
4. Equip with material and spiritual things.
Qu Qiubai's On the Realistic Problems of Popular Literature and Roper's Popular Literature and Art: "Roper's popular literature and art should arm the proletariat and working people ideologically, ideologically, emotionally and on general cultural issues." ? Soong Ching Ling? Cultivate strong revolutionary descendants: "We must arm them mentally and physically so that they can withstand the test they will face."
5. the army.
Mao Zedong's preface: "It is the period of War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, and our party's armed forces are cooperating with friendly forces to wage a cruel war against the enemy at the front." Mao Dun's "false alarm": "They decided to stay in the armed forces and hide the total score in the homes of ordinary people."