In the morning and in the evening
Zhao Liang and Mu Jin, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ā Oli á NGM ù J ì n, which means people are capricious and have no moral integrity. From Feng Dao by Liu Yin of Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Dao was the prime minister in the Five Dynasties, and had eight surnames in the Five Dynasties. He didn't care about his death. He called himself Changle Laozi, and wrote his autobiography of Changle Laozi. Chen Guanjue was proud of it, but he was inferior at that time. Yuan Liu said ironically in his poem Feng Dao: "it's difficult to retain the position of a conquered country and surrender a minister, and he is crazy and stubborn about Laozi's officials of several dynasties. In the morning and the evening of the Jin Dynasty, we have nothing to do but give up the remains and Khitan. "
Idiom usage
Who is the son of Duan Ning? Duan Ning's generation is like an ant. Liang Qingbiao's poem Wang tiegun in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: morning and evening, morning and evening
In the morning and in the evening
un-matched in the past and the present - zhuó jué qiān gǔ
heart startled and gallbladder broken -- extremely frightened - jīng shén pò dǎn
be contented in poverty and devoted to things spiritual - ān pín lè dào