be quick to switch sides
The Chinese idiom, CH é NQ í nm ù ch ǔ, means that the metaphor is capricious. It comes from Mencius, the second part of GongChou.
Analysis of Idioms
Qin Dynasty and Chu Dynasty
Idiom usage
The metaphor is capricious
The origin of Idioms
Wang Fuzhi of the Qing Dynasty wrote "Mencius, the second part of GongChou, a complete collection of reading four books" that "he is a wanderer who is lost. He is afraid that he will not be able to be a minister but not a minister. Therefore, in the morning, in the Qin and in the evening, he has no country but not a minister, and no monarch but not his monarch."
Chinese PinYin : chén qín mù chǔ
be quick to switch sides
Water without source, wood without root. wú yuán zhī shuǐ,wú běn zhī mù
Sincerity is the key to success. jīng chéng suǒ zhì,jīn shí wéi kāi
Speak earnestly, listen contemptuously. yán zhī zhūn zhūn,tīng zhī miǎo miǎo