Against the sun
Against the sun, against weapons, against the sun. It comes from Huainanzi lanmingxun: "Duke Luyang and Han gounan are at war. At dusk, they fight for each other and fight against each other.". It is the remains of ancient Chinese myths and legends. Later, it is used to describe the time of staying in the company, hoping that the day can be prolonged; it is also used to describe eliminating difficulties and reversing the crisis.
Idioms and allusions
It is said that King Wu of Zhou led the princes to attack King Zhou of Yin. The banners were flying and the voices of killing were everywhere. The battle was very fierce. Duke Lu Yang, King Wu of Zhou's subordinates, became more and more brave and the enemy was overpowered. Seeing that it was late, Duke Lu Yang raised his long sword to Japan Waving, roaring like thunder, the sun retreated three constellations, restored light, and finally completely annihilated the enemy. However, when it comes to the founding meeting and the constitution, they are all politics of leaning against the wall. There is no one who is a prodigy against the sun. The 29th chapter of Nie Hai Hua by Zeng Pu in Qing Dynasty
Discrimination of words
[usage] as predicate, object and attributive, it refers to the person who has great talent and general plan [structure] combined type [time] ancient times [synonym] wave back to the sun, wave back to the sun, wave back to the sun [Tongyun word] Chunting Xuanshi, er Tao San Shi, canpan Lengzhi, humble corporal, Zhiren corporal, only depending on one's strength, inconclusive, golden and jade, coming in one move, loyal and righteous
Chinese PinYin : huī gē fǎn rì
Against the sun
patch up a quarrel and reconcile the parties concerned. xī shì níng rén
sit tight in the fishing boat despite the rising wind and waves—hold one's ground despite pressure or opposition. wěn zuò diào yú chuán