time flies
Wu Bu Tu Zou, pronounced w ū C ú NT ù Z ǒ u, is a Chinese idiom, which means the sun and moon move. It comes from the poem titled "Yingzhou Xianhui" written by Liu Guan of Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
[name] Wu Tu Zou [Pinyin] W ū C ú NT ù Z ǒ u [explanation] refers to the operation of the sun and the moon. Rabbit, the legendary moon rabbit. By the moon.
Idioms and allusions
[source] Liu Guan's poem entitled "the picture of Yingzhou immortal society" in Yuan Dynasty: "Mao long flies away without trace, while wu long walks with double jumps."
Discrimination of words
The crowflies and the abbitrun. & lt; time flies. & gt; degree of common use: rare emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: as object and attribute; used in written language idiom structure: combination generation time: Ancient
Chinese PinYin : wū cún tù zǒu
time flies
what the heart wishes one 's hands accomplish. dé xīn yìng shǒu