Be at ease
It's a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is "nx ī NL è Y", which means to be willing and happy. From a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The 114th chapter of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty: "I think the second sister-in-law is willing to show filial piety to my mother, which is ten times better than the daughter-in-law."
Idiom usage
He is willing to live in the temple. The 25th chapter of Wu Jianren's nine lives strange injustice in Qing Dynasty and Li Yu's how to force marriage: "when you get married to my family, you need to be happy and don't hate your husband." Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty wrote in his book naihetian jizuo: "everyone, like me, should live a life of peace and contentment." In the first chapter of the three heroes and five righteousness: "after that, empress Liu and Guo Huai felt at ease and thought that there would be no future trouble."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: willing
Be at ease
make frequent changes in policies or measures - zhāo lìng mù gǎi
strong enough to pull up mountains and raise tripods - bá shān gāng dǐng
length of land on small picture - chǐ shān cùn shuǐ
as if nobody on earth could beat him - bù kě yī shì
a magnificent house become a mound of earth-vicissitude - huá wū qiū xū
strike the head on the ground and call on heaven - qiāng dì hū tiān