The sun forgets its eclipse
The Chinese idiom, R ì Z è w à ngsh í in pinyin, means that the sun is too far west to eat. It describes dedication and diligence. It comes from the biography of Zhang daozhuan in the book of Jin.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Jin, biography of Zhang daozhuan: "we can't understand the great shame of heaven and man, solve the overhanging of common people, forget to eat the sun and wait for the sun."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used of diligence
Examples
It is to forget the eclipse with the help of the sun, and it is also to regret the mid night. The biography of Lu Yu in the book of Wei
Chinese PinYin : rì zè wàng shí
The sun forgets its eclipse
a happy event which pleases one 's mind -- a cheerful disposition and a happy event. shǎng xīn lè shì
flutter in the wind in the wind. yíng fēng zhāo zhǎn