The day draws the moon
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ì y ǐ NYU è ch á ng, which means things grow with the passage of time. From Guoyu Qiyu.
Idiom usage
It begins with a sweeping response to advance and retreat without being in a hurry to make the comer commit suicide in learning, and the way comes with time.
The origin of Idioms
"Guoyu · Qiyu" says: "it is because the country is not introduced by the day, not by the month."
Idiom explanation
Quotation: extension, here is the meaning of increase. It means that things grow with the passage of time.
The day draws the moon
Stones from other mountains can be used to attack jade - tā shān zhī shí,kě yǐ gōng yù
A wife who has shared her husband's hard lot must never be cast aside. - zāo kāng zhī qī bù xià táng
the long dark years under the rule of the exploiting class - cháng yè nán míng