Days come and months go
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ì L á iyu è w ǎ ng, which means to describe the passage of time. It's the same as "days pass and months come". It's from the eighteen pictures of Hu Jia.
The origin of Idioms
The twelfth part of Hu Jia's eighteen Pais written by Liu Shang of Tang Dynasty: "the day comes and the month goes to urge each other to move, and the stars are far away, and the year wants to go around the sky."
Analysis of Idioms
Cold comes and summer goes, winter comes and autumn goes
Idiom usage
As time goes by, the days come and the months go, but the hands are gone. Warning to the world: little lady giving money to young people
Days come and months go
watch out furtively to the east and west - dōng qiáo xī wàng
used to describe the beautiful dress of a woman - huā zhī zhāo zhǎn
take a share of the spoils without participating in the robbery - zuò dì fēn zāng
retire from active athletic competition - fēng dāo guà jiàn