sail with the wind
Sailing with the wind, a Chinese idiom, pronounced sh ù NF ē ngsh ǐ Chu á n, means that you have no idea and follow others to talk or do things. From the story of heroes and heroines.
Idiom explanation
It means that you don't have an idea and follow others.
The origin of Idioms
The eighth chapter of Wenkang's biography of heroes and heroines in Qing Dynasty: "although I am an eventful person, I can't do anything that goes downhill, sails with the wind, or even buys a good name or wears a high hat."
Analysis of Idioms
Sail with the wind, sail with the wind, steer with the wind
Idiom usage
Take advantage of the opportunity to act
Chinese PinYin : shǔn fēng shǐ chuán
sail with the wind
asking for some water and getting some wine. qǐ jiāng dé jiǔ
discourse at random of things past and present. shuō gǔ dào jīn
with fate adverse and circumstance unfavourable. shí guāi mìng jiǎn
Divide the world into two parts. jīng wèi zì fēn
reap the fruits of one's actions. zì zuò zì shòu