Lu yangzhuanri
Lu yangzhuanri, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ǔ y á nghu ī R ì, which means to pull back the crisis. It comes from Li Dongyang of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
It's hard for Lu Yang to come back every day, but he is worried every day. Jiang Tongchao's poem entitled the picture of Ge Chi Ren smiling up to the sky
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: Lu Yang's fight and Lu Yang's return to Japan
The origin of Idioms
Li Dongyang of Ming Dynasty wrote in his book the answer to the four fold rhyme of the two Pagoda Temple and Zhang Zhao: "my song is not coming. I want to follow Lu Yang's example and play the sunset."
Idiom explanation
It means to pull through the crisis. The same as "Lu Yang".
Chinese PinYin : lǔ yáng huī rì
Lu yangzhuanri
go out early and come back at dusk. zǎo chū wǎn guī
the soft intestines turn a hundred times. róu cháng bǎi zhuǎn