Flying with the wind
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē IP é ngsu í f ē ng, which means that people have no opinion and their attitude changes with the situation. It comes from the book of the late Han Dynasty, Emperor Ming Ji, written by Fan Ye of the Southern Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
You can't muddle along with the wind.
Analysis of Idioms
Feipeng Chengfeng
The origin of Idioms
Fan Ye of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in the book of the late Han Dynasty, the chronicle of the Ming Emperor: "flying with the wind, sighed by the Weizi, you will never see the precepts."
Idiom explanation
The withered awning flies with the wind. It means that a person has no opinion and his attitude changes with the situation.
Flying with the wind
make frequent changes in policies or measures - zhāo gèng mù gǎi