the wise bird chooses its branch
It is a Chinese idiom, which means to choose the master and do things for him.
explain
Sermon: serve. It used to refer to choosing the master and working for him.
source
The fourteenth chapter of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: "don't you hear that" good birds choose trees to live in, and good officials choose their masters to do things? "
usage
In the Qing Dynasty, Chu people won the third chapter of the romance of the Sui and Tang Dynasties: "everything has its own destiny, you can't expect it, you don't have to be impatient; wait for the time to move, you don't have to worry about wealth."
Chinese PinYin : zé zhǔ ér shì
the wise bird chooses its branch
maintain one 's original pure character. yī chén bù zī
Consider the past and the present. zhuó gǔ cān jīn
We are anxious about gain and loss. guǐ dé guǐ shī
preserve one 's own life at all costs. gǒu quán xìng mìng
be free from things of the world. chāo rán wù wài