far away and not within the foreseeable future
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y á oy á ow ú Q ī, which means that the time is far away, I don't know which day, the possibility of realization is very small. Very long. It comes from Li Boyuan's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The 27th chapter of Li Boyuan's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: "look at the money in front of Huang panggu, where the money is gradually spent, and there is only a thousand taels of silver left, and the lack of it is far away."
Idiom usage
Generally used as predicate and attribute. It's a derogatory term example Liang Bin's red flag spectrum: "it's only said that she can come back in ten years, but she doesn't know it's ~."
Chinese PinYin : yáo yáo wú qī
far away and not within the foreseeable future
impartial and strict officials. tiě miàn yù shǐ
referring to astonishment at unfamiliar sights. shǔ quǎn fèi rì
lookers-on see most of the game. bàng guān zhě qīng
have a definite object in view. yǒu dǐ fàng shǐ