be adjustable to circumstances
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su í g ā Oji ù D ī, which means you can speak high or low, whatever. It comes from "five Lantern Festival yuan · fushanyuan Zen master FASI · Hengyue fengneng Zen master".
The origin of Idioms
In Song Dynasty, Shi Puji's five Lantern Festival, Yuan Dynasty, fushanyuan Zen master, FASI, Hengyue fengneng Zen master, said: "the common character of bitterness and happiness is to follow the high and follow the low."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive.
Examples
My grandson is not going! No! As the saying goes, "three on credit is no match for two." I just want you to give me a pair. The third chapter of journey to the west by Wu Chengen in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : suí gāo jiù dī
be adjustable to circumstances
a capable young man from a distinguished family. jiàng mén hǔ zǐ
be at the end of one 's forbearance. rěn wú kě rěn
The man who tied the bell must be used to untie the bell. jiě líng xū yòng xì líng rén
with a heroic spirit that conquers mountains and rivers. qì zhuàng shān hé
part company each going his own way. fēn dào yáng biāo