when water flows , a channel is formed
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Shu à D à OQ ú ch é ng, which means that where water flows, there will be a channel. It means that when conditions permit, things will naturally succeed. It comes from the book of reply to Qin Taixu.
The origin of Idioms
Su Shi of Song Dynasty wrote in his reply to the book of Qin Taixu: "don't make classics and paintings at that time. It's a natural thing to do, and there's no need to worry about it."
The use of Idioms
It means that the condition is ripe. 1. Su Shi's book with Zhang Zihou in Song Dynasty: "I'm afraid that there will be hunger and cold in the years, so I can't read it many times. However, as the saying goes, it will come naturally, and I will deal with it at the right time." (2) Song Shi Daoyuan's biography of lanterns in Jingde: "how to use a wonderful sentence?" The teacher said, "it will come naturally.". Chapter 5: "after that, it was a natural thing to do 4. Zou Taofen's zagan Neng Yu Wei: "in the past, the so-called" natural success "and the so-called" finding the source from both sides "were all cordial portraits after full preparation." 5. In Qing Dynasty, Li Yu's "leisure and occasional mail, great harvest brake" said: "it is necessary to be natural, not from the bucket, but from the sudden."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: easy to solve, ripe, logical antonym: futile
Chinese PinYin : shuǐ dào qú chéng
when water flows , a channel is formed
bring a romance to a happy ending. chéng rén zhī měi