yield to all the wishes
In Chinese, the Pinyin is B ǎ ISH ù nqi ā NSU í, which means to obey everything. It's from Ling Mengchu's the second moment of surprise.
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, attributive and adverbial to describe unprincipled accommodation
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: baishunbaiyi
Antonym: headstrong
The origin of Idioms
The sixth volume of Ling Mengchu's the second quarter of the Ming Dynasty: "General Li was very proud of his cleverness, knowledge and love, and he was like a pearl or jade."
Idiom explanation
It describes being submissive to everything. It's the same as "hundred by hundred with".
Chinese PinYin : bǎi shùn qiān suí
yield to all the wishes
place oneself in others ' position. shè shēn chǔ dì
A thousand hammers beat the Gong, one hammers set the tone. qiān chuí dǎ luó,yī chuí dìng yīn
What's right and what's wrong. mào shì qíng fēi
provide against any misfortune. yǐ fáng bù cè