the daybreak
It is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǒ uzhu ǎ NSH ē NH é ng, which means that the Big Dipper turns, Shensu hits the horizontal; it refers to the time when the sky is about to light. It's from Shanzai Xing.
The origin of Idioms
The Three Kingdoms · Wei · Caozhi's "shanyaxing" said: "the moon is waning, the Big Dipper is languishing."
Idiom usage
It's going to be light. The tenth chapter in the history of pain written by Wu Jianren in Qing Dynasty: "after sitting for a long time, it's about midnight when we have a look at the fierce fight." In the history of the Song Dynasty, Yue Zhi said, "the battle turns to be fierce, and the day is as bright as spring."
Chinese PinYin : dǒu zhuǎn shēn héng
the daybreak
The fist does not leave the hand, the tune does not leave the mouth. quán bù lí shǒu,qǔ bù lí kǒu
hate someone to the core hatred marrow. hèn zhī rù gǔ
turn traitor for personal gain. qū jié rǔ mìng