Day and night
Day Yin and night Yang, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ò uy ī NY è y á ng, which means that according to the ancient Chinese theory of yin and Yang, day belongs to Yang and night to Yin, which means that the way of heaven is abnormal and there will be disaster. It comes from the biography of Wang Yun in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
The origin of Idioms
Wang Yunzhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "the law enforcement of the moon crime, the comet still see, the day is cloudy and the night is sunny, the fog invades."
Idiom explanation
According to the theory of yin and Yang in ancient China, day belongs to Yang and night to Yin. "Day Yin and night Yang" means that the way of heaven is abnormal and there will be disasters.
Day and night
have a retinue before and behind - qián hū hòu yōng
slow of tongue and clumsy of utterance - zhuō zuǐ bèn sāi
cut off the long and compensate the short - zhé cháng bǔ duǎn
take a turn for the better and be out of danger - zhuǎn wēi wéi ān
enemy forces closing in from all sides - sì jiāo duō lěi
play up to people of power and influence - bā gāo zhī ér