Fortune and misfortune
The Chinese idiom, Hu ò f ú y ó ur é n in pinyin, means that both misfortune and happiness depend on people's own actions. It's from the story of chunwu, Fanmu.
The origin of Idioms
In the book "the story of spring and Wu" written by Wang Luo in the Ming Dynasty, it is said that "Heaven's net is really reliable. We need to know what's wrong and what's good is what's good."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used to admonish.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] misfortune and fortune depend on each other, fortune depends on each other, fortune depends on each other, fortune depends on each other, fortune depends on each other, fortune depends on each other
Fortune and misfortune
throughout the empire all hearts turned to him - tiān xià guī xīn
a perfect match between a man and a girl - láng cái nǚ mào