fit in exactly with one's wishes
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh è ngzh ò ngxi à Hu á I, which means exactly what you want. It comes from the biography of Liu Xuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Liu xuanzhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "the emperor was drinking to me, and he was holding things at this time!"
Idiom usage
As predicate and object, the description is in line with the mind. Ming Xiaosheng's Jinpingmei Cihua chapter 50: I don't want him to come there to invite me, just to my heart's content. Ming Shi Naian's Water Margin: "after listening to it, Cai Fu was very happy that it was issued like this; it was in his heart." Chapter 23 of Li Baojia's Officialdom: when a woman hears this, she immediately shouts, "your honor, I'm wronged!" Chapter 20 of the story of heroes and Heroines: "it's very good to hear this and say it busily." Chapter 31 of the flowers of the evil sea: Caiyun was there to embarrass him. After hearing this, he said happily, "no matter how good it is. “
Idiom story
After Lu Junyi came back from Liangshanpo, he was falsely accused by his wife and Li Gu of being in prison, but Yanqing failed to rescue him. Liang Shanbo tried his best to save Lu Junyi by the sword, but he was also jailed for being outnumbered. Liang Zhongshu, the official in Beijing, was worried that Song Jiang would send troops to besiege the city, so he had to put them on death row for a while. Cai Fu, the old man, was just in his heart and tried to protect the two heroes.
Chinese PinYin : zhèng zhòng xià huái
fit in exactly with one's wishes
a person of heavy responsibility. tài shān liáng mù
every form of evil cannot be done. zhū è mò zuò
barter the trunk for the branches. qù běn qū mò
one 's criminal conspiracy was unmasked. dōng chuāng shì fàn