The end of the day
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is R ì Ji ǎ oy ǎ NYU è. It comes from the first chapter of Shun Di Ji in the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Yan Yue, refers to the forehead like a half string moon.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Hong of the Jin Dynasty wrote in the first chapter of Shun Di Ji of the later Han Dynasty: "when he was elected to yeting, the prime minister Mao came to see him and said," the so-called sun and moon are fading away. The prime minister is extremely expensive, which I have never seen before. " So I thought it was a noble man. "
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used of a person's appearance. Example: in the book of the later Han Dynasty (Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10, Volume 10 So I thought it was a noble man. " also see "Guangwudi Ji of the later Han Dynasty": "seven feet and three inches long, beautiful eyebrows, big mouth, longzhun, rijiao." The fourth volume of Taiping Yulan: "if there is a Yan Moon in the first month, there must be a Jiazhu."
Chinese PinYin : rì jiǎo yǎn yuè
The end of the day
share the same bed and the same pillow. tóng chuáng gòng zhěn
try to get to the heart of a matter. pán gēn jiū dǐ
the happiness of a married couple deeply in love. yú fēi zhī lè