An idiom about Chu River and Han Dynasty

Question 1: In a game of chess, there is an idiom in the Chu River and the Han Kingdom, and the entire army is wiped out

Question 3: Crazy guess in the idiom, half of the chess picture has the Chu River and Han Boundary Chu Boundary and Han River

chǔ jiè hàn hé

[Interpretation] Chu and Han are competing for control. Land boundaries and rivers between regions. It is often compared to the front line of war.

[Example] In an instant, smoke and flames shot into the sky...like a hail of bullets, vaguely~. (Chapter 16 of "Popular Romance of the Republic of China" by Cai Dongfan and Xu Genfu

Question 4: An idiom for playing chess on the border between Chu and Han. In the past, Xiang Yu and Liu Bang negotiated at the divide and agreed to use the divide as the boundary. The east belongs to Chu and the west belongs to Han.

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The world is divided into two parts, so it should be equally divided

Question 6: There is an idiom with the words Chu, River and Han in the flag.

It means, soldiers. ---It can be done.

Question 7: A chessboard divides the boundary between Chu and Han. During the Qianlong period of the Qing Dynasty (1736 to 1795 AD), Jinshi Liu Yong served as a bachelor of Dongge University and was also a famous scholar. A calligrapher wrote a poem about the Seven Rhythms of Xiangqi:

Across the river, the fire breaks out.

Clouds form in a circle around the situation.

Once gone, there is nothing to return but a pawn. Wu,

Can't hide his identity as a general.

It's difficult to control the chariot.

The flying cannons are even more evasive.

The soldiers are also graceful and graceful,

They also record their loyalty and diligence.

The whole poem is embedded with seven images: soldiers, generals, chariots, artillery, soldiers, and horses. Chess piece. The seventh sentence means that Shi Nai is a member of the imperial guard and the like. Although he keeps coming and going, he is not a warrior who has made meritorious deeds.