emerge as the times require
As a result, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is y ì ngy ù n é RSH ē ng, the old refers to the destiny. Now refers to adapt to the opportunity. It comes from the preface after the Han Dynasty written by Xun Yue of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
XunYue's preface to the end of the Han Dynasty: "to be true is to be born with virtue; to be established in accordance with luck."
Idiom usage
Example: Wang Bo's Yizhou Confucius Temple stele in the Tang Dynasty: "great, sacred, with the time back to thin, came into being, after the heaven." In a dream of Red Mansions written by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: "in the second time, people were born in heaven and earth, except for great benevolence and great evil, and the others were no different; if great benevolence came into being, great evil should be born by plundering, and the rule of the world should be carried out, and the danger of the world should be born by plundering." Liu Baiyu's "the second sun" nine chapters: "two, doing nothing, some personal thoughts like weeds came into being."
Chinese PinYin : yìng yùn ér shēng
emerge as the times require
put a round peg in a square hole. fāng ruì huán záo
adapt oneself to circumstances. shùn shí ér dòng
take unnecessary pains to study an insignificant problem. zuān niú jiǎo jiān