perpetrate whatever evils one pleases
Arbitrary, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ì y ì w à NGW é I, which means to do whatever you want. It comes from the manuscript of the history of the Qing Dynasty, biography II, Zhu Wang Yi.
Idiom explanation
Wanton: arbitrary, arbitrary; wanton: reckless.
The origin of Idioms
"In the 13th year of Qianlong reign, the imperial edict denounced the deity for protecting porcelain, which led to the two eyes to become slaves, mistreated the elder brothers and daughters, and captured the nobility."
Analysis of Idioms
Do as you please, be lawless and unscrupulous
Idiom usage
It's more formal; it's a predicate; it's derogatory. There are only a few diehards who ignore the interests of the nation. Mao Zedong's "Notice of the government of the Shaanxi Gansu Ningxia border region and the rear of the Eighth Route Army" and "Hanshu": Wang genqian, the Marquis of Quyang, was the assistant of the three princes. He knew that Zhao Zhaoyi killed the prince and did not play in vain. On the contrary, he compared with Zhao and acted recklessly. In the 120th chapter of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty, "Wu Zhuhao changed the Yuan Dynasty to Jianheng; in the first year of Fenghuang, he acted recklessly; he garrisoned the poor troops; all the people complained."
Chinese PinYin : zì yì wàng wéi
perpetrate whatever evils one pleases
Turning the past into the future. yǎn gé wéi xuān
go in to and come out from the state of being and not being. chū yǒu rù wú
A donkey's lips are not the same as a horse's. lǘ chún bù duì mǎ zuǐ