without news or letters
Yanyaoyushen is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is y à NY à oy ú ch é n, which means it is too far to be seen. It refers to the interruption of information. It comes from the ninth book of journey to the west by Yang Xian of Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
You can't see from afar. It's a metaphor for breaking news.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Yang Siam's journey to the west is the ninth of the third book: "I'm not a woman but a man. I've thrown my parents away from my hometown, but the wild goose and the fish are missing."
Idiom usage
It refers to the interruption of each other's sound.
Examples
Liu Tingxin, Yuan Dynasty, wrote in "the order of parting from laurel" that "if you want to leave your life most bitterly, you will never hear of it."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Xin Duan Yin Jue
Chinese PinYin : yàn yǎo yú chén
without news or letters
but it is all overgrown with rank grass. jū wéi mào cǎo
try to shorten the neck of a crane and lengthen that of an owl -- to go against nature. duàn hè xù fú
add other things to an affair creating more difficulties. tiān zhī jiē yè
handle a crisis without difficulty. lǚ xiǎn ruò yí
remain an indifferent spectator. cóng bì shàng guān