Do what you want
Gan Ge Zai Ji, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā ng ē Z à ij í, which means no longer resort to force. From the book of songs · Zhou Song · Shi Mai.
Idiom explanation
Gange: ancient weapons, by means of fighting, using force; Zai Ji: shipping and gathering.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs · Zhou Song · Shi Mai" said: "carry the original fighting, carry the bow and arrow."
Idiom usage
A truce is a truce. example I am full of Qi and exhausted. Please make peace with the chief inspector. In Song Dynasty, Chen Liang's "shangguangzong emperor's admonition" and "baopuzi · Shizhi", it is said that "the dry and the weak carry the source, and the complex and the weak are both Taos."
Chinese PinYin : gàn gē zǎi jí
Do what you want
befuddle the minds of the public. xiáo luàn shì tīng
be content with staying where one is. gù bù zì fēng
everything is contained therein. wú suǒ bù bāo
thieves and police work together , as the cat and the rat sleep together. māo shǔ tóng mián