appoint/dismiss a person at one's own will
Jiaxi chuiyuan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ā x ī Zhu ì Yu ā n, which means to hold one's love on one's lap and push one's dislike into deep water. It means that one's love and dislike are changeable. From the book of rites under the tan Gong
The origin of Idioms
According to the book of rites, under the sandalwood bow: "today's gentleman, if he enters, he will put it on his knees; if he retreats, he will fall into the abyss."
Analysis of Idioms
It's moody. It's not easy to fall in love
Idiom usage
It refers to the person who loves and dislikes impermanence, and the person who cherishes the trees in the world. It means that the spirit is too strong, the lungs and intestines are too hot, good and evil are good and evil, or overflow to make people fall into the abyss. Qian Qianyi's tomb list of Wang Jimu in Qing Dynasty
appoint/dismiss a person at one's own will
all return to the same place though travelling in different roads - tóng guī shū tú
get the opposite of what one wants - qiú yì fǎn sǔn