days and months multiplying
Accumulated over time, a Chinese idiom, pronounced R ì J ī Yu è L ě I, describes long-term accumulation and refers to continuous accumulation day by day. It comes from Zhu Xi's answer to Zhounan Zhongshu in Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Learning knowledge should be accumulated over a long period of time. 2. There is no secret to learning a foreign language, only by accumulating over time.
The origin of Idioms
In Zhu Xi's answer to Zhounan Zhongshu of the Song Dynasty, it is said that "we should study at any time and discuss at any time, but if we can rectify three or five times in a day and understand three or five things, we will accumulate over time, be naturally proficient and naturally bright."
Idiom story
A horse can't leap ten steps, a horse can't drive ten, and the merit lies in perseverance. The rotten wood can't be broken, and the stone can be carved. The mountain can be moved, and the sea can't be reclaimed. If you don't take a single step, you can't reach thousands of miles. If you don't take a small stream, you can't build a river.
Chinese PinYin : rì jī yuè lěi
days and months multiplying
a worthless person in imposing attire. mù hóu yī guàn
govern by doing nothing that goes against nature. wú wéi zhī zhì