agree without justification
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ǒ uh é Q ǔ R ó ng, which means to cater and please others. It comes from the legend of Pingyao by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty wrote in the biography of Pingyao: "the people are surrounded by three top four, one by one, they stretch out their hands to ask the imperial doctor to see the pulse."
Idiom usage
Song Wumingshi's Xuanhe Shupu Xingshu six: "the interest is still high, not for the world."
Analysis of Idioms
Three to four
agree without justification
make blind and disorderly conjectures - hú sī luàn xiǎng
reel silk from cocoons -- make a painstaking investigation - chōu sī bāo jiǎn