leave events to take their own course
Let it go, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R è NQ í Z ì Li ú, which means free development without restriction. It comes from Huainanzi xiuwuxun written by Liu An in the Western Han Dynasty.
Idioms and allusions
[source] it is said in Huainanzi xiuwuxun: "when the water flows to the East, the man will do something, and then the water will get the grain; when the grain grows in spring, the man will do more, so the grain will grow. If we let it flow and wait for it to grow up, we will not be able to make contributions to him, but not to use the wisdom of Houji. " [example] Liu Shaoqi's on the cultivation of Communist Party members: "some party members let certain shortcomings, mistakes and all kinds of bad phenomena in the party go, and let them develop on their own."
Discrimination of words
Phonetic code: rqzl synonym: let it go Xiehouyu: the river broke the dyke lantern riddle: rain dripping on the eaves usage: as predicate and adverbial; refers to letting it develop freely
leave events to take their own course
the friendship for many generations - jì qún zhī jiāo
Stir up the clouds and stir up the rain - bō yún liáo yǔ
scratch the back while the knee is itching -- irrelevant - xī yǎng sāo bèi
obtain gold by washing it from sand and gravel - pái shā jiàn jīn