act of one 's own free will
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R é NZ ì w é izh è ng, which means that each person carries out his own ideas, and it means that each person goes his own way. It's from Li Yu's "casual love, CI and Qu, pattern" in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
At present, the Beijing Shanghai woodcut movement is still very popular, and it's rather loose, and it's almost self-governing.
Analysis of Idioms
Do one's own business
The origin of Idioms
Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty wrote "the legend pattern, there are certain but immovable, there are still, can be changed, listen to people's own politics."
Idiom explanation
Each one carries out his own ideas. Metaphor goes its own way.
Chinese PinYin : rén zì wéi zhèng
act of one 's own free will
unable to distinguish between real and fake. mò biàn chǔ yè
Stretch your legs and waist. zhǎn jiǎo shēn yāo
evil men usurping authority. chái láng héng dào
bring disgrace on the mother country and casualties on the army. rǔ guó sàng shī
the rich men dare not sit right under the eaves. zuò bù chuí táng