March with each passing day
The Chinese idiom, R ì m à iyu è zh ē ng in pinyin, means that the sun and the moon keep moving, which means that time keeps moving. From Shi Xiaoya Xiaowan.
Idiom usage
But I don't know if I can get rid of my family? The day marches on, the matter is not on, the elder brother appropriate pain cuts the custom to entangle may also.
The origin of Idioms
"Shi Xiaoya Xiaowan" says, "I am in Sima on the day, but in yuesi." Zheng xuanjian: "step, March, all line also."
Idiom explanation
The sun and the moon keep on running. It means time goes by.
March with each passing day
gloomy eyebrows and wrinkled forehead -- knit the brows - chóu méi cù é
not let others express their views - dù jué yán lù
tears trickling down one 's cheeks - shān rán lèi xià
The onlookers see clearly - dāng jú zhě mí,páng guān zhě qīng