Do whatever you want
In Chinese, Pinyin is m á NGB ù Z é Ji à, which means selling in a hurry can't get a good price. It's from a warning to the world.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty, the 15th volume of the general admonition of the world: "it's not a pity that we are busy now and we can't choose the price."
Idiom usage
Used as an attributive or adverbial; used in confusion
Do whatever you want
so subtle as to be difficult to guess what comes next - shén miào mò cè
dare to confront the greatest danger - hǔ kǒu bá yá
killing someone with a borrowed knife - jiè dāo shā rén
Forefathers slip, posterity slip - qián rén shī jiǎo,hòu rén bǎ huá
When the river is choked up, it will collapse - chuān yōng bì kuì