allow oneself to be seized without putting up a fight
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ù sh ǒ Uji ù Q í n, which means to tie up one's hands to be caught. To be caught without resistance. It comes from the biography of Fu Yanqing in the history of Song Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Hand binding: binding one's hand by oneself, which means not trying to find a way; accepting; catching: catching alive. Tie up your hands to be caught. To be caught without resistance.
Idiom usage
After two years of fighting, King Ning didn't want to be defeated by Xinjian Bo Wang Shouren for a while. The eighth chapter of scholars by Wu Jingzi in Qing Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
Fu Yanqing's biography in the history of Song Dynasty: "if you fight to death, you may not die."
Analysis of Idioms
synonyms: sit and wait to die, let fate decide, bind your hands Antonyms: be stubborn
Chinese PinYin : shù shǒu jiù qín
allow oneself to be seized without putting up a fight
after rain comes the sunshine. pǐ wǎng tài lái
efficiency comes from diligence. yè jīng yú qín
Out of sight, out of mind. yǎn bù jiàn,xīn bù fán