Day after day
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī R ì L ě ISU ì, which means long time. It comes from qiutuilu.
The origin of Idioms
Li Dongyang of Ming Dynasty wrote in qiutuilu: "either excessive diet, or lack of labor from time to time, it has been a long time, even the deficiency of vitality, phlegm evil knot."
Idiom usage
As an adverbial or a clause, it refers to a long period of time
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: years and months
Day after day
harmonious relation among emperor and his ministers - shèng jīng xián xiàng
put new wine into old bottles - jiù píng zhuāng xīn jiǔ
still to have some fight left in one - yú yǒng kě gǔ
complicated and difficult to deal with - pán gēn cuò jié
on the basis of one-sided viewpoint - máng rén mō xiàng