Day after day
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī R ì L ě ISU ì, which means long time. It comes from qiutuilu.
The origin of Idioms
Li Dongyang of Ming Dynasty wrote in qiutuilu: "either excessive diet, or lack of labor from time to time, it has been a long time, even the deficiency of vitality, phlegm evil knot."
Idiom usage
As an adverbial or a clause, it refers to a long period of time
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: years and months
Chinese PinYin : jī rì lěi suì
Day after day
appear and disappear without regularity. chū mò wú cháng
various musical instruments made of metals , stone , strings , and bamboo. jīn shí sī zhú
Forget one's life and give up one's life. wàng shēng shě sǐ
insatiably greedy like wolves and tigers. láng tān hǔ shì
thump one 's chest and stamp one 's feet. chuí xiōng dùn zú