戴月披星
      Explanation: Wearing the stars, the moon overhead. Described as spare, hard work, or day and night, hurry, hard journey.
      Usage: Joint type; as predicate; means dawn to dusk
      Source: Yuan Jin Renjie "chasing Han" Second off: "Husband not at home every happy, but also by such daytime students."
      Examples: What a wind trek, ~. (Ming Wu Cheng-en, "Journey to the West" Forty-fourth back)
  • Thesaurus:  day and night, pass from night to morning, travel or toil night and day, early to rise and late to bed, neglect one's meals and sleep, rise early in the morning and late, start work early and knock off late, round the clock, On Star with Phi, round the `clock all day and all night