god is carrying out the wishes of man
The Chinese idiom Ti à NC ó NgR é NYU à n in pinyin means that heaven obeys man's will, which means that the development of things is in line with one's wish. It's from "he Han Shan".
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: heaven does not make beauty, things go against one's wishes, just the opposite
The origin of Idioms
The second discount of Yuan Dynasty's Zhang Guobin's "he Hanshan" is: "who knows that heaven obeys man's wishes, and it takes less than three days to get to my home to add a full hug boy."
Idiom usage
As a predicate, an object, a clause. Chapter 4 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: I'm worried about going to Beijing to be under the jurisdiction of my uncle, and I can't squander it at will. Now I'm going out, and I know that heaven agrees with people's wishes. Chapter 13 of Jing Hua Yuan written by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty: on that day, when I heard that my country could only ride on the clouds but could not go, I often thought of it and wished I could see it immediately. Today, it's a wish of heaven and man. Chapter 10 of the story of heroes and Heroines: "if my father is allowed to do it, it is heaven's will." Mao Dun's "Midnight" 6: "his only hope is that Wu Zhisheng talks about it in other words, but actually" Heaven obeys man's wishes. "
Chinese PinYin : tiān cóng rén yuàn
god is carrying out the wishes of man
be linked mountains and rivers. shān shuǐ xiāng lián
open robbery and secret theft. míng qiǎng àn tōu
to be in deep anxiety day seems like a year. dù rì rú suì
The past does not mend the present. bù fǎ gǔ bù xiū jīn