all is well that ends well
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í R é NTI à nxi à ng, which means superstitious people think that good people will get the help of heaven. It is often used as comfort words for other people's illness, difficulties or misfortunes. From Zuo Zhuan, the third year of Xuangong.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] great fortune, prosperous official fortune antonym] many disasters, not a single disaster
Idiom usage
Since Geng tie has gone back, the original post must be returned. But, your son and father are ill, and there will be a good day. We have to think twice. Awakening the world by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty (Volume 9)
The origin of Idioms
In the third year of Xuangong in Zuozhuan, Shi GUI said: "I heard that Ji and Jiayou would be the descendants of fan. It's also good for people. " In the fourth year of the reign of emperor Zhaogong, it is said that "the Jin and Chu dynasties are only heaven's phase, so we can't compete with each other."
Chinese PinYin : jí rén tiān xiàng
all is well that ends well
avoid the strong and bully the weak. tǔ gāng rú róu
exclude the difficulty and anxiety. pái yōu jiě nán
an early recovery from illness. zǎo zhān wù yào
a broken mirror joined together. pò jìng zhòng hé
remain mute as if one 's mouth were sealed. sān jiān qí kǒu
a pleasant night cow coupled with a fine landscape. liáng xiāo měi jǐng