Day after night
In Chinese, the Pinyin is y ǐ R ì J ì y è, which means day follows night, day and night. It comes from the biography of Zheng Zhuo in Chen Shu.
The origin of Idioms
"Chen Shu · biography of Zheng Zhuo" says: "Zhuo's family is poor. He copied Yishu to continue the day and night, and wrote with every trace
Analysis of Idioms
The night follows the day
Idiom usage
Sister Lanzhi: it's already dusk, so-called "I predict the day, but I don't know the night." please give me dinner. My sister used the word "dusk" to hand in the paper, in order to remember that the day is happy to get together, and the day follows the night. The ninety second chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : yǐ rì jì yè
Day after night
to try to save a little only to lose a lot. xī zhǐ shī zhǎng
make up deficits and increase surpluses. niǔ kuī zēng yíng
imitate others and thus lose one 's own individuality. hán dān xué bù
leave a subject for ridicule. shòu rén kǒu shí