travel day and night with all possible speed
Travel day and night, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ò uy è Ji ā nx í ng, meaning to walk day and night. I'm on my way. It comes from the biography of Lu Meng in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
Idiom explanation
Day and night: day and night; and: double; line: walk. Walking day and night. I'm on my way.
The origin of Idioms
In the chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, Wu Zhi and Lu Meng Zhuan, it is said that "the white clothes can be used as the clothes of merchants and Jia people, and they can travel both day and night."
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, adverbial; refers to the way. In Chapter 96 of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty, he ordered that the cavalry who were good at shooting and used to fighting should be selected as the vanguard, and the main army should be in the back, carrying a curly armor, walking both day and night
Analysis of Idioms
Day and night
travel day and night with all possible speed
Fall on one's feet and beat one's chest - diē jiǎo chuī xiōng
strict and fair in meting out rewards and punishments - shǎng fá yán míng
Fire and water are incompatible - shuǐ huǒ bù xiāng róng
be willing to spend ten million in finding good neighbors - qiān wàn mǎi lín