The sun and the moon
Bathing in the sun and the moon, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ù R ì y ù Yu è, meaning to be moistened by the sun and the moon. It's from Hua Yue Chen.
The origin of Idioms
It is said that Yu ascended the Nanyue Mountain and got the book of gold slips and jade characters. There is an article saying: "Zhu Rong's secretary sent his English, bathed in the sun and the moon, and a hundred treasures were born." The fourth and ninth chapter of the trace of flowers and moon
Idiom usage
He angzang, who is seven feet away from his life, is a good example. Bao Dao Ge by Qiu Jin in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : mù rì yù yuè
The sun and the moon
like a square tenon for a round mortise ---- at variance with each other. yuán záo fāng ruì
unable to suffer the humiliation made by the warder even if he is a whittled phoney one. kè mù wéi lì
ever remembered in the annals of history. yǒng chuí qīng shǐ
thump one 's chest and stamp one 's feet. chuí xiōng dùn jiǎo