The sun and the moon rise
The sun and the moon, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ì Yu è sh ē NCH é n, which means that the metaphor is not right. It comes from Xiao Dexiang's killing dog and persuading husband in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The first part of Xiao Dexiang's killing a dog and persuading a husband in Yuan Dynasty: "it's not that I hate my brother. He doesn't think about the flesh and blood of my mother, but he works with me day and night."
Idiom usage
The two sides are separated from each other and cannot meet each other or become enemies. example with the sun and the moon, I can express my heart.
Chinese PinYin : rì yuè shēn chén
The sun and the moon rise
bend the law to suit private interest. wǎng fǎ xùn sī
The net of heaven is large and wide, but it lets nothing through. tiān wǎng huī huī,shū ér bù lòu
the things are there just as before , except the beloved one. rén wáng wù zài
an endless stream of dreamy thoughts , as if from an inexhaustible spool. qiān chóu wàn xù
ready to die the cruelest death for principles. gān xīn tú dì
spread out and scatter about like stars in the sky or chessman on the chessboard. qí bù xīng chén