sail with the wind
Sailing with the wind, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ù NF ē ngsh ǐ Chu á n, which means sailing with the wind; it refers to doing things under favorable conditions, easy to succeed; it also refers to taking the opportunity to do things. From the story of heroes and heroines.
The origin of Idioms
The eighth chapter of Wenkang's biography of heroes and heroines in Qing Dynasty: "but I can't do any business that goes downhill or even buys a good name to wear a high hat."
Idiom usage
Take advantage of the opportunity to act.
Chinese PinYin : shǔn fēng shǐ chuán
sail with the wind
his hands respond with delicacy to whatever the mind directs. xīn shǒu xiāng yìng
act without due consideration. shuài ér cāo gū
a man should get married on coming of age. nán dà dāng qǔ
shelter evil people and countenance evil practices. cáng wū nà gòu