- 文武百官 wénwǔbǎiguān civil and military officialsall the civil and military officials; specifically refers to the entire body of government officials in a kingdom or state
- 文武双全 wénwǔshuāngquán to be a master of pen and sword(idiom) well-versed in both literary arts and military affairs; describing a person with both scholarship and martial prowess
- 文武全才 wénwǔquáncái master of both the pen and the swordPossessing both literary and military talents; versatile and exceptionally gifted in command of both civil and martial skills.
- 文武兼备 wénwǔjiānbèi to have both literary and martial talentspossessing both scholarly and military skills; used to describe someone who is both intellectually and physically capable
- 文武兼资 wénwǔjiānzī skilled in both civil and military affairspossessing both literary talent and military skill; also written as [[文武兼备|文武兼備|wen2 wu3 jian1 bei4]]
- 才兼文武 cáijiānwénwǔ gifted in both civil and military affairsto possess both literary talent and military skill; to be equally proficient in scholarship and martial strategy
- 文武场 wénwǔcháng traditional opera orchestraThe combined percussion and string/wind sections of a traditional Chinese opera orchestra. It is composed of the [[文场|文場|wen2 chang3]] (string and wind instruments) and the [[武场|武場|wu3 chang3]] (percussion instruments).
- 文武合一 wénwǔhéyī possessing both civil and military talentsDescribing a person who is proficient in both scholarly and martial pursuits; having both literary and military skills
- 满朝文武 mǎncháowénwǔ all court officialsthe entire body of civil and military officials in the imperial court; all the ministers and generals serving the emperor