I'll follow you
Jiyin qiusui, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī y ǐ nqi ú Su í, which means that children can inherit their father's and brother's business. It comes from the book of rites · Xueji.
Idiom explanation
It means that children can inherit their father's and brother's business.
The origin of Idioms
"The son of good governance must learn to be Qiu, and the son of good bow must learn to be Ji."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attributive; it is used as example in written language. If you rise to the throne, you will be followed; if you go to Zhou Qiwu, you will sing and you will be reconciled; if you go to the throne, you will be joined by the couplets of pearls and jade! ——Song Lian, Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : jī yǐn qiú suí
I'll follow you
reward the virtuous and punish the wicked. shǎng shàn fá è
moan and groan without being ill. wú bìng shēn yīn
discard the false and retain the true. qù wěi cún zhēn
wear one 's heart on one 's sleeve. xīn zhí kǒu kuài
a popular code for the phrase " extremely exquisite. huáng juàn yòu fù