The age of the day is failing
The Chinese idiom, Ti ā NNI á Nb ù Su ì in pinyin, means not enjoying the year of heaven. It comes from the annals of the late Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"An Di Ji" in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "I didn't mean to die, but I was in trouble, and my heart was broken with grief."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing.
Examples
"Yuefu Poetry Collection · Xianghe songs 14 · Yanmen Taishou Xingyi": "the age of heaven is not successful, already faint."
Fan Ye of the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, wrote in the book of the later Han Dynasty, the annals of the emperor an: "it's not easy to die, but it's difficult to live a happy life, and it's hard to break my heart with grief."
The age of the day is failing
The eagle flies and the tiger eats - yīng yáng hǔ shì
Those who follow the Heaven's law will survive; those who go against it will perish - shùn tiān zhě cún,nì tiān zhě wáng
Divide the grass and give the earth - fēn máo cì tǔ
one 's resonant voice rings out - huáng zhōng dà lǚ