follow the providence
Ying Tianyun, a Chinese idiom, is y ì ngTi ā NCH é ngy ù n in pinyin, which means conforming to heaven's destiny and accepting heaven's fortune. It comes from baopuzi, the wine commandment.
Idiom explanation
Comply with the destiny and accept the fate of the world.
The origin of Idioms
In the book baopuzi · Jiujie written by Ge Hong of Jin Dynasty, it is said that "Han Gao should carry out the revolution in accordance with heaven. Although he is not drunk, he should be beheaded." Zeng Pu of Qing Dynasty wrote the second chapter of "Nie Hai Hua:" it is said that in the Qing Dynasty, there were thousands of ways to carry the goods according to heaven. It was always according to the old system of China and guided by the circumstances. As expected, the weather was good and the country was peaceful and the people were safe. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used of the ruling class
Examples
Since upholding the law is the virtue of water, in Qin Dynasty, it is necessary to kill people in accordance with heaven. Of course, "full-time prison officials must be trusted by their relatives," and "happiness is based on punishment and killing.". Guo Moruo's ten critiques: Lu Buwei's critique of Qin Wang Zheng
Analysis of Idioms
Fengtian
Chinese PinYin : yìng tiān chéng yùn
follow the providence
accept what is wrong as right when one grows accustomed to it. xí fēi chéng shì
have only bare necessities at home. shēn wú cháng chù
greedy , cruel and shameless. gǒu xīn gǒu xíng
dense forests in the deep mountains. shēn shān mì lín