fold one's hands and await destruction
Waiting to die, Pinyin is sh ù sh ǒ UD à is ǐ, which means not actively trying to find a way in the face of difficulties, sitting and waiting for failure. It's the same as "waiting to die". From the tenth chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The tenth chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms written by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty: "since Cao Bing arrived, how can he hold his hand to death? Someone is willing to help him break it."
Idiom usage
If you would like to give me a good idea, I will not. In the Qing Dynasty, Chu people won the 94 th chapter of the romance of Sui and Tang Dynasties
fold one's hands and await destruction
a swarm of people running after unwholesome things - rú yǐ fù shān
be toughened and hardened into steel - bǎi liàn chéng gāng
pull together and work hard as a team - bì lì tóng xīn
think back and forth to oneself - sī qián xiǎng hòu