Morning and evening
In the morning and in the evening, words are used as predicates and attributives to describe people's caprice and lack of moral integrity. It comes from the poem "Wang Ning's wife" written by Li Dongyang of Ming Dynasty: "if you don't see the generals of Central Plains praising their sons, you will go against the tide of the Liang Dynasty and the Zhou Dynasty."
Idioms and allusions
In the poem Wang Ning's wife written by Li Dongyang of Ming Dynasty, "if you don't see the generals in the Central Plains praising their sons, you will go against them in the morning, in the evening and in the Zhou Dynasty."
Discrimination of words
It refers to caprice without moral integrity
Word usage
It refers to caprice without moral integrity
Morning and evening
plan very carefully with every conceivable possibility taken into account - móu wú yí cè
keep the parents warm in winter and cool in summer - dōng wēn xià qīng