Morning and evening
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is "zh ā of ā m ù zh ì", which means to start in the morning and arrive at night. It describes a short distance or convenient transportation. It comes from the biography of Wu Huan in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
The two places are close to each other. Today, fortunately, the palace is more than three hundred miles away from Beijing, and luanyu has been in action for ten days.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: morning and evening
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Wuhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty, "the residence is near the fortress, the palace is in the palace, the city is in the dusk, the five counties are common people, and the family is under their Gu."
Idiom explanation
Start in the morning and arrive in the evening. It's a short distance or convenient transportation.
Morning and evening
profess one thing, but mean another - kǒu bù yìng xīn
thinking of absent friends or relatives - tíng yún luò yuè
There's no one left here, there's a place to stay - cǐ chǔ bù liú rén,zì yǒu liú rén chǔ
Pull out the ground and shake the mountain - bá dì yáo shān