Steaming up (zhēng zhēng rì shàng) develops upward day by day. It describes the speed of development. It mostly refers to life and business.
From Qing Dynasty's Li Baojia's "The Present Condition of Officialdom": "Your world brother is also a great talent in Panpan, and has good dispatching skills, so are you still afraid of not prospering day by day?"
Translation: Your world brother is a person of great talent, and he has a way of doing things, so he is still afraid of not prospering.
Usage: as predicate, determiner.
Synonyms: thriving, as the sun rises, rumbling day by day.
Antonyms: deteriorate every day, river goes down by the day .
Expanded Information
1, Near Synonyms
Xinxin Xiangrong is an idiom, pronounced xīn xīn xiàng róng, describing that the grass grows luxuriantly. It is a metaphor for a flourishing career.
From Jin Tao Qian's "The Rhetoric of Returning to China": "The wood is thriving in order to flourish, and the spring is trickling and beginning to flow."
Translation: The grass and trees are flourishing, and the spring trickles slowly.
2. Antonyms
Jianghe Rishi, a Chinese idiom with the pinyin jiāng hé rì xià, usually refers to the water of a river flowing downward day by day, and is now used as a metaphor for the situation getting worse day by day.
From "The Old Remnant's Travels, Second Series, Eighth Episode": "It would be intolerable for the criminal law to be aggravated, yet the hearts of the people are thus going down by the day."
Translation: If the punishment were to be increased, it would be intolerable to the heart, yet the human heart refers to the water of the river flowing downward day by day.