It's just right
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k è Z ú sh ì J ù, meaning to cut one's feet according to the size of shoes. It means that the primary and secondary are reversed. It comes from reading he Siju's Miscellaneous Poems About Autumn residence in Huangzhou.
The origin of Idioms
Lu You of Song Dynasty read he Siju's rhyme of Huangzhou's autumn Residence: "in the past, people also had words, and the carving was enough to suit them."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: cut foot to fit
Idiom usage
As an object or attributive
Chinese PinYin : kè zú shì jù
It's just right
do what one wishes without restraint. sì yì wàng wéi
the wilds were full of dead bodies of the starved. è piǎo biàn yě
make every move only after mature deliberation. lǎo móu shēn suàn