lost track of time
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī nx ī h é x ī, which means what night is tonight? It is often used as a compliment. This is a good time. It comes from the book of songs, Tang style, preparation and niannujiao, crossing Dongting.
Idiom usage
As an object or a clause, it is used as an exclamation? Save it? No? When a lover goes to the end of the world, the garden trees are sad, and flowers appear three times. Feng Menglong, Ming Dynasty (Volume 25)
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs, the wind of the Tang Dynasty, preparation": what's the end of the day? See this man. " Zhang Xiaoxiang, Song Dynasty, wrote a poem in "niannujiao, passing Dongting": "buckle the rail and smile alone, I don't know what's the end of the day."
Chinese PinYin : jīn xī hé xī
lost track of time
pay too much respect to one 's superiors and despise those who are of lower ranks. chǎn shàng ào xià
Terraced mountain and trestle Valley. tī shān zhàn gǔ
to believe everything in books is worse than to have no books at all. jìn xìn shū bù rú wú shū