Back to the day
Back to the sun, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu ī g ē Hu í R ì, which means to wave weapons, back to the sun, to describe the crisis. From Huainanzi · lanmingxun.
The origin of Idioms
In Huainanzi lanmingxun written by Liu An of the Western Han Dynasty, it is said that "Duke Luyang and Han are in a difficult situation. They are in a fierce battle. At dusk, they fight for each other and fight against each other
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attributive. It is used as metaphor to eliminate difficulties and turn the crisis around. However, he envies Luyang's merits and virtues, and has passed them back to Japan. Liu Ji, Ming Dynasty
Idiom story
It is said that King Wu of Zhou led the princes to fight against King Zhou of Yin. The banners were flying and the killing voices were rising everywhere. The battle was very fierce. King Wu of Zhou's subordinate, Duke Luyang, became more and more brave and the enemy was overpowered. Seeing that it was late, Duke Luyang raised his long spear and waved it to the sun, roared like thunder, and the sun retreated three stars. Finally, the enemy was completely annihilated.
Chinese PinYin : huī gē huí rì
Back to the day
overwhelm with numerical strength. rén duō shì zhòng