Day after day
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Zhu ǎ NR ì Hu í Ti ā n, which means to describe the power, can reverse the situation is difficult to recover. It comes from Lu Zhaolin's ancient Chang'an in Tang Dynasty.
Idioms and allusions
King Wu of Zhou crusaded against King Zhou. When he was crossing the Yellow River in Mengjin, the Lord of wave God raised a big wave and rolled it head on. The wind was so strong that the sky was dark and the ground was dark that people and horses could not see clearly. At this time, King Wu of Zhou held the Yellow Yue in his left hand and the military flag in his right hand. He said angrily, "who dares to disobey my will if I am here?" So the wind and waves are calm with the voice. In addition, in the past, Duke Luyang and South Korea formed a feud and engaged in war. When the battle was hard to separate and the sun was sinking in the west, Duke Luyang brandished his arms and drank, but the sun gave up. In this way, those who are all sincere and don't lose their body will be able to get help from the emperor of heaven when they are in danger. If one has never deviated from the essence of Tao, he will succeed in everything he does. Those who regard life and death as the same cannot bully him; those who are equally powerful and brave can dominate the three armies. Of course, such powerful and brave people are only for the pursuit of fame. Then, these people who pursue fame can do so, not to mention some people who wrap the nature of heaven and earth, embrace all things in mind, make friends with nature, and have the spirit of neutralization in their heart. These people really only regard human body as the body of "Tao", and study the single-minded "Tao", then they can know what has never happened Many things they know; they really achieve the coexistence of mind, nature and Tao.
In the spring and Autumn period, it is said that King Wu of Zhou led the princes to fight against King Zhou of Yin. The banners were flying and the killing voices were everywhere. The battle was very fierce. King Wu of Zhou's subordinate, Duke Luyang, became more and more brave, and the enemy was overpowered. Seeing that it was late, Duke Luyang raised his long spear and waved it to the sun, roared like thunder, and the sun retrogressed three constellations, and finally the enemy was completely annihilated. At dusk, he waves to stop it, and the sun retreats for it. Waving can make the sun retreat. Later, he used the term "turning day after day" to describe his great strength and ability to reverse the situation that is difficult to recover.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Zhao of Tang Dynasty wrote a poem called "Chang'an ancient flavor" which said: "don't call a general a luxury, but don't give way to each other every day."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Examples
Ming Gaoming's story of Pipa: official media's marriage discussion: "he is powerful and powerful, but you are different from him. I'm afraid he will come back in the future, and then there must be a break. "
Chinese PinYin : zhuǎn rì huí tiān
Day after day
my ability is unequal to the given task , for you cannot use a short rope to draw water from a deep weel. gěng duǎn jí shēn
bully the weak and fear the strong. qī ruǎn pà yìng
a deep grievance that cannot be cleared. chén yuān mò xuě