The meaning of unlucky times is that people are in an unlucky state for many years. It's called bad luck. There is no necessary connection between the fleeting year and the animal year.
The fleeting years are unfavorable
From Ming Dynasty Feng Menglong's "Eternal Words to Awaken the World: Du Zichun Enters Chang'an Three Times": "I think it is my unfavorable fleeting years, so I cannot bear the blessing, and that is why I am like this."
p>I guess it’s because I’ve had bad luck these past few years, so I’m not lucky enough to enjoy it, because it’s reached this point.
Example: Lao Wang has been having a really bad time recently, and bad things have happened one after another, making him at a loss.
Grammatical subject-predicate form; used as predicate and object; with derogatory connotations
Synonyms include bad luck, ill-fated fortune, fortune and fortune
Antonyms: rapid success, success, success
Extended information
1. Synonyms of bad luck
Bad luck
Explain bad timing and fate.
From Volume 19 of "Surprise at Two Moments" by Ling Shuchu of the Ming Dynasty: "Luck has been bad recently. I lost two cows the day before yesterday. Now the donkey is sick again and I can't watch it."
The timing and luck have been bad recently. I lost two cows the day before, and now the donkey is sick again and cannot take care of the children.
For example, one time he went to see a doctor for a sick woman in the middle of the night. The doctor was so sleepy that he prescribed the wrong medicine. People all blamed Zhao Si for his bad luck, and even the famous doctor was implicated in the wrong medicine. medicine!
Grammar is used as a predicate and attributive; it refers to bad luck
2. Antonyms for unfavorable times
Fast success
Explanation of Feihuang: Legend The name of the divine horse; Tengda: rising, extending to fortune, and a successful career. Describes a galloping horse. It is a metaphor for sudden success and rapid promotion in official position.
From the poem "Fu Shu Cheng Nan" by Han Yu of the Tang Dynasty: "You can't look at the toads when they are flying."
The dragons and horses are flying so fast that you can't see the toads on the ground.
Example: He attended various workshops and training courses to cultivate New Deal talents, although none of them resulted in his success.
Grammatical subject-predicate form; used as predicate and attributive; with derogatory connotations