in the morning one doesn 't know what will happen in the evening
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ā ob ù L ǜ x ī, which means you can't know what will happen at night or what will happen in the morning; it describes the situation as critical and unpredictable. From the petition.
The origin of Idioms
Li Mi's Chen Qing Biao in the Jin Dynasty: "but Liu is dying, his life is in danger, and he never worries about it."
Idiom usage
The old man is in critical condition and is on the verge of death.
Discrimination of words
[synonym] never look forward to time, never be safe, in danger
Idiom story
After the unification of the whole country, Emperor Wu of Jin promoted "governing the world with filial piety", advocating filial piety to parents and respect for the elderly. He wanted to use the Western Shu minister Lang Li Mi, so he issued an imperial edict to appoint Li Mi as a doctor. Li mi didn't want to be an official, so he wrote a petition, saying that he and his grandmother depended on each other, and that his grandmother's life was precarious. He would come out to be an official after serving her
in the morning one doesn 't know what will happen in the evening
tremble with fear on hearing of - wén fēng sàng dǎn
Destroy the square and turn the circle - huǐ fāng tóu yuán
the troops have been in operation too long and soldiers are extremely tired - shī lǎo bīng pí
please don 't refuse to offer your kind advice - bù lìn zhǐ jiào