follow blindly
Step by step, the Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī B ù y ī Q ū, which means to follow closely; it means to imitate and follow others in everything, often with a derogatory meaning. From Zhuangzi Tianzifang.
The origin of Idioms
According to Zhuangzi Tianzifang, "the master's step is the same as the master's step, and the master's trend is the same."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, attributive and adverbial. In the Qing Dynasty, Bai Yi Jushi's record of the pot Heaven (Volume II): "when you look at it sideways, it's beautiful and gorgeous. It's moving step by step, and it's only a short distance away." The old die hards even called me a reformer, learning from Zhou Xiaohuai and observing Zhou step by step. Chapter one of Li Jieren's great waves Chapter 19 of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty: "we have to fold our spirit, keep our steps steady, lean our waist, stand our chest, keep our neck straight, and walk forward step by step." Li Jieren's the first chapter of the first part of big wave: "the old die hards even scolded me as a reformer, learning from Zhou Xiaohuai and Zhou Jianwei."
Chinese PinYin : yī bù yī qū
follow blindly
impartial and strict officials. tiě miàn yù shǐ
affection loses with beauty withering away. sè shuāi ài chí